First $2m step in making Auckland Is pest free

Sea lion mothers tend their pups in the tussock on Auckland Islands. Photo: Getty Images
Sea lion mothers tend their pups in the tussock on Auckland Islands. Photo: Getty Images
Funding has been pledged to investigate making Auckland Island the country's largest predator-free island - an effort that could eventually cost up to $50 million.

Conservation Minister Eugenie Sage announced $2m over three years to fund early stage planning and field trials towards making the sub-Antarctic island predator free.

"This is an ambitious project on the 46,000ha Auckland Island and a major step towards the goal of New Zealand being predator free by 2050," Sage said in a speech to Forest and Bird's annual conference, held today.

The initial funding will help conservationists get an idea of the scale and complexity of eradicating pigs, cats and mice from the island.

"Any decision to proceed will require a long-term commitment of resources and effort.

"Early estimates suggest the potential cost of eradication may be in the order of $40m to $50m over eight to 10 years," Sage said.

"The Department of Conservation is working closely with iwi partner Ngāi Tahu and will be seeking other partners to collaborate on the project."

Conservation Minister and Green Party MP Eugenie Sage. Photo: NZME
Conservation Minister and Green Party MP Eugenie Sage. Photo: NZME
Auckland Island is New Zealand's fifth-largest island, and is the main island of the Auckland Islands. It lies 465km south-southeast off the coast of Bluff, or about a third of the way to Antarctica.

The tussock-covered islands are wind-swept, rugged and mountainous, with steep cliffs and deep valleys.

They have been a World Heritage site since 1998, and are one of the few large land masses in the Southern Ocean. That makes them a critically important breeding ground for seabirds and mammals - wildlife that is being killed by introduced pigs, cats and mice.

The 25 seabirds breeding on the islands include the Auckland Island shag, yellow-eyed penguin and Gibson's and white-capped albatross.

The $2m feasibility fund will come from the Budget 2018 appropriation of $81.3m towards achieving a predator-free New Zealand by 2050.

"Eradicating these pests from New Zealand's fifth-largest island would see Auckland Island become the country's largest pest-free island. It would complete the removal of introduced predators from all of New Zealand's sub-Antarctic islands," Sage said.

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