Community cutting the head off rat problem
Archived content: This media release was accurate on the date of publication.
Introduction
Volunteers around Taupo gather to celebrate predator trapping.Date: 24 March 2017
Goodnature co-founder Stu Barr, trapping volunteer Jean Stanley and DOC Central Plateau Manager Dave Lumley taking predator control seriously
Recently more than 50 volunteers from around the Taupo District gathered together to talk all things predator trapping.
They celebrated successes, shared ideas and learnt new techniques from special guests from conservation technology company “Goodnature”.
The celebration, hosted by the Department of Conservation (DOC), invited the 12 active predator trapping groups from around Lake Taupo to hear Goodnature co-founder Stu Barr talk about the origins of the company, and update the groups on the latest technological advances.
After introductions by each group, Stu stood up and said it brought a tear to his eye to see so many community volunteers together to talk predator trapping, “I couldn’t have imagined this many volunteers when we started up over ten years ago”.
Since then, Goodnature have revolutionised the fight against the predators harming our birds – possums, rats and stoats – with the design and manufacture of automatic traps that humanely kill pest animals and then reset themselves. Instead of volunteer hours spent re-setting single-kill traps, they can now cover a wider area with traps that can take out up to 24 rats or stoats without needing to be checked for six months.
Currently DOC estimates in the Taupo district up to 80 volunteers work on over 15 predator trapping projects contributing nearly a thousand work days every year – a huge conservation effort to restore balance to local biodiversity.
Community trapping began in 2002 at Pukawa at the southern end of Lake Taupo, with local resident Jean Stanley – whose passion for protecting native flora and fauna has spread like wild fire around the lake. Her encouragement inspired projects in Omori, Kuratau and Whareroa – and has since swept north with the establishment of the Kinloch community predator control group only last year.
It was only appropriate then that Jean cut the celebratory “Rat Cake” with Stu Barr and DOC Central Plateau Manager Dave Lumley. After cutting the head off the rat, and seeing the raspberry jam centre ooze out Dave commented “although a slightly gruesome sense of humour from our community rangers, this is a fitting way to acknowledge the immense effort within the district to bring back the birds by reducing the impacts of introduced predators.”
With the announcement of Predator Free 2050 last year, the passion in the Taupo district is a step in the right direction. Community group Greening Taupo president Paul Green said he is bolstered by the achievements of the southern trapping programmes and hopes to see the same appetite for action in Taupō itself. To encourage action, Greening Taupo is facilitating a meeting with support from Wairakei Sanctuary and DOC, Thursday 18 May 5.30-7pm at the Wairakei Golf + Sanctuary, Wairakei Drive.
Background
- Goodnature is a conservation technology company with a vision for a natural environment in which native species survive, thrive and flourish, free from the threat and destruction of introduced pests. Goodnature is constantly working to develop products that make it easy for everyone to create sanctuaries in their backyard, however big. They are committed to providing pragmatic solutions to one of our most serious environmental problems - biodiversity decline.
- Stu Barr is on the Board of Management for the Pukawa Wildlife Management Trust. His connection to the community through a family holiday home has meant the Pukawa trapping group has trialled the technology as part of their predator control programme - including use of the early “Henry” model self-setting trap, and more recently having success with the new auto-lure pump for A24 traps.
- Predator Free 2050 is an ambitious programme to rid New Zealand of three of our most damaging introduced predators – possums, rats and stoats – by 2050. It will deliver huge benefits for the social and cultural links with our environment, for our regional economies through primary industries and tourism and for our threatened native species.
Contact
For media enquiries contact:
Email: media@doc.govt.nz