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Home / Rotorua Daily Post

Aerial 1080 improves kiwi chick survival - study

Rotorua Daily Post
17 Apr, 2019 01:06 AM3 mins to read

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DOC rangers Jerome Guillotel and Alison Beath with brown kiwi chicks, Tongariro Forest. Photo / DOC
DOC rangers Jerome Guillotel and Alison Beath with brown kiwi chicks, Tongariro Forest. Photo / DOC

DOC rangers Jerome Guillotel and Alison Beath with brown kiwi chicks, Tongariro Forest. Photo / DOC

Kiwi chicks in a North Island forest are more likely to survive following aerial 1080 to control pests a newly published long-term study shows.

In the first longitudinal study of its kind, Department of Conservation researchers tracked hundreds of North Island brown kiwi and their offspring through four large-scale joint OSPRI/DOC 1080 operations in Tongariro Forest over 22 years.

Read more:
• Rotorua anti-1080 group hoping to prove trapping is a viable pest-eradication alternative

DOC principal science advisor Dr Hugh Robertson, who was part of the research team, said it showed unequivocally that aerial 1080 to suppress possums, rats and stoats (killed when they ate poisoned pests) benefitted kiwi.

"Stoat attacks are the leading cause of death for kiwi chicks and without pest control as few as 5 per cent of chicks survive to adulthood," Dr Robertson said.

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"Our research shows that aerial 1080 pest control, significantly improves the survival of kiwi chicks for two years before dropping off when rat and stoat populations begin to recover to pre-control levels.

"The 1080 operations knock down all resident stoats and likely all ferrets too and allow kiwi to survive to levels that can build their population."

"We also monitored 142 radio-tagged kiwi through four aerial 1080 operations and none was poisoned."

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Brown kiwi from Tongariro Forest. Photo / DOC
Brown kiwi from Tongariro Forest. Photo / DOC

Results showed that just over 50 per cent of kiwi chicks in the 20,000-ha Tongariro Forest survived to six months old in the first breeding season after aerial 1080 treatment and 29 per cent the year after.

In the following three years, before the next five-yearly 1080 operation, kiwi chick survival halved to 15 per cent, well below the 22 per cent survival required to maintain this kiwi population.

Dr Robertson said the research supported DOC shifting in 2014 to a three-year cycle of aerial 1080 predator control in Tongariro Forest to help the kiwi population grow.

"Population modelling shows that to get the kiwi population growing by at least 2 per cent, which is the target in our new Kiwi Recovery Plan, we needed to increase pest control operations to once every three years."

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The study began in 1992 and monitored radio-tagged adult male brown kiwi as well as 207 kiwi chicks hatched in Tongariro Forest between 1996 and 2014. The kiwi chicks were monitored until six months old when they reached a size where they could fight off stoat attacks.

Researchers also looked at the effects on nesting success of New Zealand fantail/pīwakawaka over 11 years.

The results followed a similar pattern to kiwi with fantail nest survival highest in the first two years after a 1080 operation (at 25 per cent and 30 per cent) when rat populations were low and dropping significantly after that (to 12 per cent in the third year and 9 per cent in the fourth and fifth years).

Breeding success of fantails was significantly better than in untreated areas in nearby forests.

Factbox

• The study was published last month in Notornis, the peer-reviewed scientific journal of the Ornithological Society of New Zealand (also called Birds New Zealand). Landscape-scale applications of 1080 pesticide benefit North Island brown kiwi (Apteryx mantelli) and New Zealand fantail (Rhipidura fuliginosa) in Tongariro Forest, New Zealand

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• Brown kiwi is one of five kiwi species found in Aotearoa. The main threat to their survival is being preyed on by introduced animals. Chicks are killed by stoats and feral cats, while grown kiwi are most at risk from ferrets and dogs.

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