Act Now to Keep Your Kauri Healthy
Act Now to Keep Your Kauri Healthy
The Kauri Rescue
team will host a public hui in the Waiatarua Community Hall
at 7pm on Thursday 31 August 2017 to support people living
with kauri trees and enable those who don’t have their own
kauri to help others keep their trees healthy.
The
main speaker will be Dr Nick Waipara who will give practical
advice on how to keep your kauri healthy, whether or not you
have kauri dieback disease. The hui will also hear from
Kauri Rescue Ambassadors Ngaire and Peter on treating their
own trees and engaging their neighbours in the
project.
Kauri Rescue is looking for more Ambassadors
from the community to join the team, support others and help
spread the word about the project to friends, family and
neighbours. Anyone who cares about kauri can become a Kauri
Rescue Ambassador. If you are interested please come along
to the hui or contact the team via their website.
The
Kauri Rescue team will also be launching their project in
Northland at two hui in Kaikohe and Whangarei on the 5-6
September. Speakers at both events will cover the science,
social science and matauranga Maori elements of the project.
There will be plenty of time for questions and to meet the
team.
The Kaikohe hui will take place on Tuesday 5
September 4-6pm at Kohewhata Marae, 6869 Mangakahia Rd,
Kaikohe.
The Whangarei hui will take place on Wednesday
6 September 5-8pm at Toll Stadium, Whangarei.
Any
landowner who thinks their kauri may be sick should contact
the Kauri Rescue team via their website at
www.kaurirescue.org.nz and book an inspection.
Kauri
Rescue is a project team comprising scientists, social
scientists, iwi and community groups which gained two-year
funding from the Government's Biological Heritage National
Science Challenge www.biologicalheritage.nz
The Kauri
Rescue project seeks to engage the public in refining a new
citizen science tool for the treatment of Kauri Dieback
Disease, which is decimating kauri forests in northern New
Zealand.
Landowners with sick kauri who join the
Kauri Rescue project are provided with tools and advice so
that they can treat their own trees with phosphite, which
has proved successful in scientific trials to date in
keeping sick trees alive. Participants are required to
collect data on the health and response of the tree to the
treatment and report it back to the Kauri Rescue team so
that the tools can be refined over the two year course of
the project. Testing other treatments and matauranga Māori
methods is also encouraged and supported as part of the
project.
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