Davey said Dodd was a team asset, sharing his knowledge and helping control a variety of pest animals within the region.
“His work at Horizons included possum control [and] leading the Kia Whārite biodiversity project which protected kiwi and whio, as well as overseeing pest plant and soil conservation in the Ruapehu district for a period of time.
“He spent a considerable amount of energy targeting possum control, which was a vital component in the fight to eradicate the incidence of bovine tuberculosis [TB] from cattle and deer herds in the Ruapehu district.”
Davey said although Dodd had retired, his long service had left a lasting legacy.
The award is named after Peter Nelson, who made an invaluable contribution to establishing professionalism within the pest management field in New Zealand. His long career in pest control – in various roles – had its origins in the 1960s and continued until his death from cancer in 1998.
The trophy is a carved kōkako standing above the skulls of small predatory mammals - a rat, a possum, and a stoat - and was designed and made by Ray Weaver.