Napier City Council staff work on the predator-proof enclosure on Marine Parade for the relocation of a colony of native kokowai/northern spotted skinks. Photo / Linda Hall
Napier City Council staff work on the predator-proof enclosure on Marine Parade for the relocation of a colony of native kokowai/northern spotted skinks. Photo / Linda Hall
Pitfall drops and hand searches will be used to capture one of the last known colonies of native kōkōwai/northern spotted skinks in New Zealand, located on the coast of Napier.
The rare skinks will then be relocated to a purpose-built enclosure on Marine Parade.
Napier City Council’s National Aquarium generalmanager Joe Woolcott said the capture and rehoming of the skinks would be overseen by New Zealand lizard experts operating under the appropriate guidelines and authorities.
“Established techniques, including harmless pitfall traps and hand searches, will be used to capture and rehome the colony,” Woolcott said.
He said while the enclosure’s fence was finished, there was still some work to fine-tune the inside environment.
Inside the predator-proof enclosure on Marine Parade. Photo / Linda Hall
“This includes arranging rocks and driftwood. There will be a water tank going in this month, which will be used for plant watering.
“Once the tank is in, low-lying native plants will be established, which will, over time, provide additional habitat and tiny fruit that skinks can eat. The majority of this should be completed by the end of February.
“All going well, the rehoming would go ahead in March or April this year.”
The fence is designed to exclude mammalian predators, including mice, rats and cats, by using a fine steel mesh and a folded-over capping.
It is not covered, so birds can still get in.
Northern spotted skinks will be moved to a new predator-proof enclosure on Marine Parade. Photo / Biodiversity Hawke's Bay
Woolcott said recent surveys indicated there were fewer than 10 skinks in the colony.
“However, as they are hard to detect, it is thought that there are perhaps 10-100 in the Napier coast population. The intent would be to translocate as many as possible into the sanctuary.”
The skinks are being relocated to make way for a $37.4 million stormwater infrastructure project between Maraenui and Te Awa.
A council spokesperson said in October last year the work was one of several upgrades the council had planned to improve its flood resilience.
The skinks, which are protected under the Wildlife Act (1953), inhabit what the council said was the most cost-effective site for the stormwater outfall infrastructure.
Napier City Council’s executive director of water services, Russell Bond, said at the time the skink enclosure was a practical solution that kept the project on schedule.
“We can proceed without delays that would cost far more, and it creates a permanent habitat protection for this rare native species,” Bond said.
The stormwater project is jointly funded by the council ($25m) and the Government’s Infrastructure Acceleration Fund ($12.4m), managed by National Infrastructure Funding and Financing (NIFF), and includes a new pump station with a back-up generator, a coastal outfall on Marine Parade and upgraded watercourses.