Welcome to the Midnight Collective Broadsheet 90
Actively
supporting NZ’s endangered wetland birds
Takahe - Mana Island |
We posted a story on the critically
endangered takahe and their distant Australian cousin and more recent arrival, the predatory pukeko in May (Broadsheet 74). We
included images from Mana Island, a protected offshore island that lies off the
coast, south of Kapiti. After a bumper breeding season last summer we had
around 300 of these birds scattered around the country. Now we have four less.
Takahe family - adolescent in foreground - Mana Is. |
The Department of Conservation employed
volunteer deerstalkers to cull pukeko, which predate takahe eggs and chicks, on Motutapu Island in the Hauraki Gulf. They gave them a morning’s training
and they’ve ended up killing four. The training would have included the directive that you can’t shoot pukeko unless they’re on the wing. (It's against the law). And takahe are a big lumbering bird that can’t fly. So the training has gone out the window, as the killing got
under way.
But where should blame be apportioned, because
this has revealed systemic problems over the management of DoC, that aren’t
being aired in the press.
Takahe - Mana Island |
The Department has previously been a staunch
advocate for our endangered and at risk native heritage. Over the last 7 years however, a major attack
by the Government on its funding and independence, has compromised its
integrity. As other Government SOE’s have been cut free of governance (then
floundered into insolvency. Solid Energy is about to be followed by Landcorp - though
Air NZ set the bench mark on this…) - DoC
has been forced the other way and emasculated. It now has no significant
input into major environmental issues, and is reduced to issuing media massaged, good news
stories to the press. Then it has been press ganged into supporting the logging
of windfall forest on the West Coast, along with a commercial monorail through a
pristine National Park.
It has also been required to act like a
business. In raising charges to Kapiti Island, the Government effectively stopped New
Zealand families from visiting it, a situation reversed shortly before the last
election (There's a surprise!). It has also been required to replace redundant staff with volunteers
and build partnerships with organisations which it would normally see as destructive to our conservation interests. This includes the Deerstalkers Association
who have long opposed DoC attempts to reduce the populations of introduced deer, eating their way through our native forests.
Takahe - Mana Island |
Then there is the issue of Ministerial
responsibility. We now have a celebrity Minister of Conservation, in Maggie
Barry a former media personality who fronted a TV gardening show. These guys are
usually fighting to get themselves on the 6 o’clock news; but she’s nowhere to
be found.
Rare and endangered - Hon Maggie Barry Minister of Conservation |
Track we were listening to while posting
this
Nina Simone - Compensation
Because I have loved so deeply
Because I have loved so long
God in his great compassion
Gave me the gift of song
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