Celebrating 20 years of Aotearoa New Zealand’s largest island eradication of predators – Part 2 | Conservation blog

Source: Department of Conservation

What the next 20 years of predator free islands hold.

In this two-part series, we’re celebrating 20 years of Aotearoa New Zealand’s largest predator free project to-date. Looking to the future, we explore what the next 20 years of restoring New Zealand’s wild and precious islands may hold. Learn how artificial intelligence, the history of phones, and feral pigs all connect.

Written by Janel Hull.

20 years ago, DOC declared the seemingly impossible operation to make Campbell Island predator free a resounding success. 

The techniques that DOC staff on Campbell Island/Motu Ihupuku pioneered helped propel the world into exponentially scaling up eradications of bigger and bigger islands. DOC’s Predator Free 2050 Senior Manager, Brent Beaven, shares how Campbell Island changed the game. “Campbell Island helped unlock a step change in what we thought was possible.”

Now, there have been over 1,000 island eradications in the world. And New Zealand is responsible for the lion’s share.

Thanks to these predator free breakthroughs, islands across the world are covered in screeching penguins, soaring albatross, and chubby sea lions. We were able to save precious native plants and animals from the brink of extinction.

But momentum in creating larger predator free islands has unfortunately waned. Brent notes, “The island eradication tools and techniques we use now have allowed us to achieve some incredible things. But, to scale up to larger and more island eradications, we need innovation.”

Technology and techniques haven’t changed much since the 2001 Campbell Island operation. Island eradications in 2023 use similar GPS, helicopters, and techniques. Which is surprising considering that in 2001 the first ipod was released, we had just survived Y2K, and fax machines and landlines reigned supreme. These predator eradication techniques are tried and true and get the job done. But the tools aren’t effective and efficient for eradicating predators from very large islands or the mainland of Aotearoa.

To tackle restoring larger islands and the mainland, we need new tools, techniques, and technology. We need investment to shift from reliable landlines to transformative smart phones.

Predator Free 2050 has focused government investment into this innovation. Since the goal was announced in 2016, programmes like DOC’s ‘Tools to Market‘ and Predator Free 2050 Ltd.’s ‘Products to Projects’ have invested in possible game changers like biodegradable aerial rat traps, AI cameras and image recognition, smart detection devices, pest-specific toxins, and research to map predator genomes to understand their unique weaknesses and biology.  In just the first five years of Predator Free 2050, government has invested $43 million into tools, research, and software for predator eradication. 

It’s unlikely research will uncover just one “silver bullet” for eradicating introduced predators. But with the help of investment and new tools and technology, Aotearoa could accelerate efforts to restoring precious islands and our mainland.

Predator Free 2050 has also helped launch DOC’s National Eradication Team (NET). This team is working on a strategy for eradicating predators from all of New Zealand’s uninhabited off-shore islands. They’re leaders in predator eradication – spearheading strategy, testing new techniques, and advising on island eradication projects both in Aotearoa and around the world.

DOC’s eradication experts have already achieved great things for people and wildlife. In 2018, a DOC team led the charge to successfully eradicate mice from Antipodes island, protecting wildlife like wandering albatross.

They’re also sharing their knowledge and expertise abroad. In 2023, they led a rat eradication on Palmerston Atoll in the Cook Islands with our neighbours in the Pacific who were struggling with rats destroying food and threatening their community’s health.

With the leadership of DOC and investment in tools and techniques, Aotearoa is taking strides to accelerate island conservation.

And these experts have their eyes set on the next big island restoration – Maukahuka Auckland Island.

Maukahuka/Auckland Island is a stronghold of remarkable plants and animals. As a subantarctic nature reserve and World Heritage site, it is home to some of the world’s rarest animals like the Gibson’s albatross, southern right-whales, New Zealand sea lions and hoiho (yellow-eyed penguin).

The island supports over 500 native plants and animals with more than 100 found nowhere else in the world. The wild landscape has blushing rātā forests and windswept clusters of bright megaherbs. Maukahuka is of great cultural and spiritual significance to Ngāi Tahu, with a long history of Polynesian expeditions to the islands to gather food and settle.

Sadly, over the last 200 years, populations of feral pigs, feral cats, and mice have inflicted severe harm. Now, of the 39 native bird species that were once on the island, 28 are either gone or remain in very small numbers. Large swaths of rātā forests have disturbed soils and stunted understories. Megaherbs are dwindling. Without action, plants and animals will continue to disappear.

At about four times the size of Campbell Island, achieving a predator free Auckland Island would be a massive undertaking. It would be New Zealand’s largest predator free island and the final step to finally restore all of New Zealand’s subantarctic islands. 

In 2021, the National Eradication Team spent three years investigating whether it was possible to eradicate pigs, mice and feral cats from Auckland Island. They concluded that making Auckland Island predator free would be achievable, worthwhile, and sustainable in the long run.

But first, the project would need about $9.75 million per year over 8 years to tackle the challenge. Innovation in image processing and targeted baits has steadily reduced the time and cost. But it would still require unprecedented support and investment.

Looking to the future, New Zealand could make even bigger strides in conservation on islands like Auckland Island. Brent reflects, “All of our progress on previous islands helped build the confidence to launch Predator Free 2050. We’re now seriously eyeing up another step change in possibility with Maukahuka Auckland Island.”

Predator Free 2050 is helping tackle the challenge of innovating new tools and technology, spearheading a strategy for restoring all islands, and growing new levels of community support and investment for eradicating pests.

The next 20 years could be promising for predator free islands. But it’ll be a challenge. Brent notes, “We’ll need to innovate, test our limits and be prepared to take a bit of risk as we step into the unknown.”


Read Part 1 of the blog series here.

DOC’s famous trapping guide is back – and onto the 3rd edition  | Conservation blog

Source: Department of Conservation

Written by Vanessa Mander, DOC’s Predator Free 2050 Communities Advisor.

Life as a ranger means that you are at the front line and members of the public see us as a trusted source of best practice trapping information. The green uniform appears to act like a beacon of sorts in the field. I certainly found that! 

Questions I have been asked: 

How do I find out what pests I’ve got?” to “What sort of humane traps are right for possums on my lifestyle block?”, to the very real, “my chickens are getting nailed by a stoat (or some other furry sod), what lures should I use in my traps to deal to it?

But what if you too could possess these answers, all at your fingertips? 

Since 2019, we’ve been printing and revising our popular publication, the Practical Guide to Trapping. It is often referred to as a “ranger in your back pocket” because it’s full of important best-practice information to help you with your trapping work. There have been so many circumstances that this book has come to my rescue. It’s the trapping bible that people really should know about.  

The DOC Predator Free Communities Team is now launching the 3rd edition of this amazing guide. Since 2019, we have distributed well over 35,000 hard copies to communities, as well as 6,000 downloads from our website.  

What can we expect with this new and improved trapping guide? 

The third edition builds on all the great, best practice trapping and predator species information, and now also includes:

  • Information on live capture trapping
  • Updated NAWAC (National Animal Welfare Advisory Committee) passed humane trap list
  • Site specific updates on kauri disease and myrtle rust
  • Updated information on recording your trap catch
  • Updated suppliers and links
  • And so much more!  

We are also excited to share the Predator Control Calendar and Stoat and Rat Trap Checklist in this new edition, courtesy of our friends at the Predator Free New Zealand Trust

These are used far and wide, and beloved across the motu, so don’t trust just us! Here’s what a range of people are saying about the Practical Guide to Trapping: 

The trapping guide is a highly valuable booklet for communities and contains vital information on animal ecology as well as DOC best practice trapping methodology and biodiversity monitoring.  

A great resource, improved further with some of our own branded material including our popular Predator Control Calendar and our new Stoat and Rat Trap Checklist. The trapping guide has always been very popular at our Cam Speedy Roadshows across Aotearoa.” 

Jessi Morgan, CE of the Predator Free New Zealand Trust.

“This little booklet is packed full of useful information. Covering animal biology, best practice monitoring and solid trapping advice, it’s never far from hand and an excellent resource for individuals and communities whatever their experience or scale.”

Tim Sjoberg, Senior Team Lead at Pest Free Banks Peninsula.

“We find the trapping guides enormously useful for our teaching & trapping. The guides are a handy size and robust. They are very easy to follow, and we find the detailed plans and dimensions of trap boxes very useful.”

Peter Varey, Gisborne Boys High School.

And from our partners from Nelson Marlborough Institute of Technology, Becs Gibson uses the trapping guide in their Level 3 micro-credential Predator Trapping Methods course.

“It is great to have detailed information on pests and reputable ‘best practice’ trapping options in Aotearoa in one booklet. Selecting the right trap for the right environment and for the target predator is essential for successful conservation outcomes and this guide lays out all the information and detail to get you off to the right start.” 

Becs Gibson, NMIT.

“At the Visitor Centre’s in Taranaki, we find that the public really enjoy the books and they are popular!! Students who study Pest Ops [Western Institute of Technology Taranaki] must choose a target species and research it’s biology, behaviour, impacts and control methods – which the ‘bible’ serves as a great resource.” 

Georgina Ngametea, Taranaki DOC Visitor Centre & Western Institute of Technology Taranaki.

Come and join in the action with us! You can pick up your own copy from your nearest Visitor Centre, or download a copy from the DOC website. But don’t worry if you already have one of the other versions, it’s still got some great best practice info in there and got some life in it yet!