Nov. 15 Rally to Address Poison Usage
Joint statement from Department of Conservation and the Animal Health Board in relation to Poison Free NZ rallies - Nov 15.
Banning poisons from New Zealand would push
vulnerable native bird species towards extinction and put
our multi-billion dollar dairy and meat industries at
unacceptable risk.
New Zealand’s native wildlife and
forests face a daily battle against attack by rats, stoats
and possums. Without protection, nine out of ten North
Island kiwi chicks born in the wild will be killed before
they reach one year old.
Possums infected with
tuberculosis cause the overwhelming majority of new TB
infections in cattle and deer herds around the country. 1080
is vital to stopping the spread of diseased possums and
protecting New Zealand’s annual $12 billion dairy and meat
export trade.
Without weapons like biodegradable 1080
and the rat poison brodifacoum, New Zealand would lose whole
populations of native birds and vast tracts of native forest
to rats, stoats and possums.
Brodifacoum has helped
us completely clear pests off more than 50 islands around
NZ, including such well known sanctuaries as Tiritiri
Matangi, Kapiti , Campbell Island and Whenua hou (Codfish
Island). Native forests and threatened wildlife like kakapo,
kiwi, albatross, saddleback and tuatara now flourish on
those islands.
There are a lot of wild and inaccurate
claims currently being made about toxins. Critics claim 1080
is contaminating water supplies, killing kiwi and getting
into our food exports. There is no evidence to back these
claims – they are simply not true.
New Zealanders
can research the facts for themselves. We should not allow a
deliberate campaign of misinformation and fear to put the
fate of our wildlife and our agricultural exports at
risk.
DOC and the Animal Health Board use toxins
sensibly and both use ground control options – traps, bait
stations and shooting –widely. Aerial 1080 treatment
accounts for about 20 percent of AHB’s pest control
operations and DOC uses aerial 1080 on less than two percent
of publically managed conservation land.
DOC and the
AHB also jointly spend more than $2 million annually
researching a range of alternative pest control
methods.
But in challenging circumstances – such as
rat plagues or difficult country – aerial poison
operations are the most cost effective method for
controlling predators and disease carrying
possums.
ENDS