A DOC fireworker walks across the fire damaged Pakihi,
Okarito Kiwi Sanctuary, Westland National Park, New
Zealand. Credit:NZPA / Supplied
Shocked locals say five fires lit near a kiwi sanctuary
on the West Coast during the weekend were the work of lazy
hunters who could have put every bird at risk.
The fires were discovered in Westland National Park near the
Okarito Kiwi Sanctuary, about 25km north of Franz Josef. The
sanctuary is home to the rarest kiwi species, the rowi, of
which only 350 remain.
Four fires were spotted from a helicopter about 3am
yesterday, while another suspicious blaze was discovered
overnight by the side of State Highway 6. A helicopter with a
monsoon bucket, firefighters and Department of Conservation
(DOC) staff tackled the first blazes, the largest of which
spread over about 500sqm of the Pakihi wetland.
Richard Saunders, who operates Okarito Nature Tours, said it
was likely that hunters had targeted the wetland because the
area was very dry above ground but wet and swampy underneath,
allowing grass to regenerate quickly.
"Deer come in to graze on the new growth and they're easy to
shoot from the convenience of your ute or your SUV," he told
NZPA.
"It's lazy, lazy hunting. There's plenty of deer in the
forest, and no one has any problem with people who are
hunting the right way, but this is just incredibly lazy and
at a massive cost to the taxpayer." The fires had done a lot
of damage to the wetland, he said.
"They are very fragile ecosystems. There's lots of bird life
in it, like endangered fernbirds, and they're slow fliers."
The community was "very angry" about the fires, Mr Saunders
said.
"We're pretty proud of where we live, it's a beautiful part
of the world, and then visitors to the area are now driving
through the charred remains of a wetland to get here." With
only a few hundred people in the area, it was likely someone
knew who had lit the fires, he said.
"The more pressure brought about, the more likely someone
will talk," he said.
"If there was a smoking gun like a charred kiwi, they'd be
coming down like a ton of bricks." Ian Cooper, the only
person authorised to take people on tours into the sanctuary,
said fires had been lit "every couple of years" for at least
20 years.
"It seems to be a residual thing -- dad does it, so it's
okay. But it's not okay. Even though they've been doing it a
long time, it doesn't mean it's right," he said.
Rowi often ventured out of the sanctuary area, and the Pakihi
wetland was known to be part of two kiwi territories.
"Potentially we could've had...birds (in the wetland area)
killed just through lazy hunting," he said.
"The worst case scenario, it could have wiped out the whole
lot. The bush is as dry as buggery out there at the moment."
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