1080 operation nails kiwi killers at Ōkārito
Media Release
30 September
2011
1080 operation nails kiwi killers at Ōkārito
DOC says the recent 1080 operation at Ōkārito has
decimated rat and stoat numbers in the treatment area,
lowering the risk to kiwi and other forest birds of
predation during the breeding season.
Post-operation
monitoring of the numbers of rats and stoats in the
treatment area of Ōkārito Forest has shown that their
numbers have plummeted since they were last assessed in
August this year. Rodent and stoat numbers in the untreated
area remained high.
Rodent and stoat numbers have
been assessed every three months since 2001 using a method
called small mammal indexing. The indexing result is a
percentage, which gives an idea of how many stoats and rats
are around.
This year, due to the increased
availability of food from the fruiting rimu and kahikatea,
rat numbers in the treatment area began to climb quickly
from 4% in November 2010 to 29% in August this year and were
mirrored by a rise in stoat numbers to from 13% in November
2010 to 48% in August. As one stoat can kill dozens of birds
in a short space of time, this was a grave threat to the
bird species in the area. After the 1080 operation, rat
numbers dropped to 1% and stoats were down to 0%.
Biodiversity Programme Manager Jim Livingstone
cautioned that there would still be a few stoats present but
their numbers are now far lower than before the
operation.
“We know from similar operations in other
places to expect up to 40% chick loss but this is far better
than the normal 95% losses that happen without control,”
Mr Livingstone said.
Rats were found to be present on
the edge of Ōkārito Forest, but only in the untreated
‘buffer zones’ outside the treatment area. Rat numbers
in the nearby untreated ‘control’ area were very high at
95%, and stoat numbers were also comparatively high at 23%.
DOC’s Franz Josef Waiau Area Manager, Wayne
Costello said, “This operation has been on hold for three
years, as we waited for the right level of rodent and stoat
numbers in the forest. The results of our monitoring after
the operation have shown that we timed the operation just
right. By taking out the main predators of kiwi and other
bird species, we are ensuring that our native species have
the best possible chance of raising chicks successfully in
the wild. 1080 is undoubtedly the best tool available for us
to achieve this goal”.
DOC is also closely
monitoring the kea population in the treatment area. Out of
a monitored group of 37 birds, 7 died of 1080 poisoning
immediately after the operation. Two weeks of intensive
monitoring after the operation have confirmed that all other
monitored birds in the treatment area are alive and appear
to be doing well. However, a monitored kea nest in the
untreated ‘control’ area was plundered by a stoat last
week, and the newly hatched chicks were killed.
“It’s disappointing to lose any of these wonderful birds,” said Mr Costello, “but the surviving kea within the area of the 1080 operation should now be able to successfully raise their chicks without facing the threat of predation by stoats or possums.”
More than 60% of kea nests fail
in the Ōkārito area, predominantly due to predation by
stoats and possums when no pest control is undertaken. A
four year research programme is underway to assess the
overall effect of 1080 operations on kea populations, and to
find ways to minimise the risk to kea. So far the study has
found that without predator control, only 36% of kea nests
are successful in fledging a chick.
The aerial 1080
possum control operation involved three years of planning
and was jointly run by the Animal Health Board and DOC. The
operation covered 30,000ha which included the South
Ökärito kiwi sanctuary, North Ökärito forest, and a
large forested buffer zone around Franz Josef Township
itself. The operation is intended to provide New Zealand’s
rarest kiwi – rowi – protection from rats, stoats and
possums as well as providing protection to local farms from
the threat of bovine tuberculosis.
ENDS
s a
method of comparing the relative abundance of stoats and
rodents in an area over an extended period of time.
Small plastic tunnels are set along numerous lines within the study area, and pieces of card with inkpads set into them are placed in the tunnels. The tunnel is then baited with peanut butter (for rodents) or rabbit meat (for stoats). The animal runs over the inkpad to get the bait leaving its footprints behind on the card. The cards are then collected and assessed.
The percentage of cards with tracks on them is then compared to the results from previous indexing work. This gives a good indication of whether the numbers of pests in an area is increasing or decreasing, and at what rate.
For additional information about the benefits
1080 has had for kaka, bellbird and other bird populations:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=09y8uw5tV6o
ends