DOC reviews 1080 use after kea die
Relevant offers
National News
Seven kea have died at Fox Glacier after eating 1080 poison, wiping out almost half a group of the endangered and protected parrot being monitored by the Conservation Department.
DOC is reviewing its use of the poison after the deaths were revealed in a draft internal report, obtained by The Dominion Post. The report says "aerial 1080 may well be a significant threat to the kea population" with some drops "probably devastating".
DOC fitted radio transmitters to 29 West Coast kea - 10 in Arawhata Valley, two in the Hohonu Range, and 17 near Fox Glacier - to see if they survived 1080 drops. All birds in the first two areas survived, but seven near the glacier died. Testing confirmed 1080 poisoning. The report says birds living near Fox Glacier were more used to taking food from humans, which may have made them more likely to take 1080 bait.
The report recommends that DOC review its use of 1080, consider cutting the amount of toxin in the bait where kea live and reassess the use of "pre-feeding", putting harmless baits out before 1080 drops. It says some 1080 drops were probably devastating to kea populations, but others had minimal impacts or even benefited them.
DOC senior adviser Herb Christophers said the report was a draft only and more work had to be done before the effects of 1080 on kea were established. Though DOC would review its 1080 activities near kea habitats, drops in the North Island would continue. The poison is used to control possums, rats and stoats.
Anti-1080 campaigner Mike Bennett said the kea deaths were the tip of the iceberg.
"These are only the monitored ones. If that percentage is extrapolated for the entire population, that doesn't leave many for the next drop."
He called for a ban on all aerial 1080 drops in alpine areas.
- © Fairfax NZ News
Sponsored links
I totally agree Paul..and one thought I had was, we are so proud of preserving and nurturing our fauna and flora, then we go and kill'm off. what picture does it show to the world. DOC ( Dog) madness!
Well, well, well...what an incredible turn around by DOC...one that is very welcome. There is no mention here of the chronic effects of 1080. Chronic effects of the poison occur when a Kea or any other bird or animal (or human) consumes a less than fatal dose of 1080. Sodium monofluoroacetate (1080) is a male fertility inhibitor, so the animals that have received a non-fatal dose of the chemical may be sterilised, which makes them the last generation of that particular line of birds.
Kea, kaka, robins, weka, pukeko, riflemen, etc, etc...same rules apply.
Aerial 1080 is a bad idea, must stop immediately while we still have some native birds left!
Prison officers 'turned into mules'
Chinese New Year celebrated in Wellington
Can the Phoenix silence the Roar?
Welly whiz-kid sees hi-tech future for education
'Sea lions' come ashore in Wellington
Prime Minister John Key wins hearts if not minds
Hurricanes thumped by Crusaders at Mangatainoka
Governor General's concert draws thousands
Concerns for missing Featherston woman
Scorching Bay death now a matter for coroner
Bus changes raise fears in suburbs
Teens mimic depression to get prescription drugs
Calls for stronger leadership on suicide
Heartbreak for Football Ferns in US
Kiwis land big Aussie contract
Ryan Nelsen debuts in Tottenham win
England fight back to edge Italy in Six Nations
Suarez a 'disgrace to Liverpool' in loss to United
Police arrest five at Murdoch's Sun newspaper
Oceania, Fifa roles end in disgrace
Cameron-Barrett to headline heavyweight night
Hurricanes thumped by Crusaders at Mangatainoka
Prison officers 'turned into mules'
Quakes blow Wellington's benchmark
Welly whiz-kid sees hi-tech future for education
Prime Minister John Key wins hearts if not minds
Old trains more reliable than new Matangi
Helmet law halves cyclist numbers
Old trains more reliable than new Matangi
Prime Minister John Key wins hearts if not minds
Bus changes raise fears in suburbs
Hurricanes thumped by Crusaders at Mangatainoka
Manawatu Gorge progress pleases
Newest First
Oldest First
In response to the 2 previous posts I have to disagree, the article points to the fact that some KEA have died because of ingesting 1080. Kea are very curious and will try out anything in their habitat, therefore they are more susceptible to poisoning. I think kaka and weka could have the same issue. However in many other areas where 1080 has been aerial dropped populations of insect eating birds such as rifleman, yellowhead and robins etc are positively affected. An issue like this doesn't mean ban this useful resource but find better ways of use without adversely affecting native animals.
One thing is for certain, without 1080 the birds will be gone anyway...this fact is obvious when you go into bush that has had nothing done and bush that has had poisoning operations.