"When we moved to
great barrier fifteen years ago, we couldn’t get over the absence of bird
life on the island and decided to do something about it," recalls Tony
Bouzaid of Glenfern Sanctuary in Rarohara Bay, Port FitzRoy. As soon as
they’d established their tourist accommodation business, Tony and wife Mal
started planting trees and trapping pests on their 80ha property. Since
2001,with funding from the Auckland City Heritage Fund, they have
progressively set up a grid of cat traps and rat bait stations over their
own property, the adjacent Orama Christian Community land and the Kotuku
scenic reserve. Together, the properties cover a small peninsula between
Port FitzRoy and Port Abercrombie. "We now manage this 230ha peninsula with
543 bait stations," Tony says.
Dedication has
paid off. The Bouzaid’s remnant coastal forest and revegetation planting is
flourishing and providing habitat to threatened species including brown
teal, black petrel, kaka, North Island robin and chevron skink. Birdsong is
increasing and 5 pairs of North Island robin, translocated with 17 others
from Tiritiri Matangi Island in April 2005, successfully fledged 21
juveniles last summer.
"We covenanted
61ha of our land with QEII because it’s the only way to protect this beyond
us," Tony explains. "Next, we want to build a predator-proof fence across
the whole peninsula. It’ll make pest eradication possible and sustainable,
using less funding than we currently receive from the Biodiversity Condition
Fund. It will also enable other threatened species like kiwi, kokako and
saddleback to be introduced.
"What a great
example it would be in the effort to eradicate rats and feral cats from the
whole island!"