Kauri dieback infection has doubled in the Waitakere Ranges in the last five years. Unless we change what we're doing now, say the biosecurity and parks managers of Auckland Council, all the kauri in that forest will be infected within 30 years. And because there is, as yet, no known cure, all those trees will die.
Councillor John Watson told the council yesterday that if kauri dieback was a human pathogen, we would treat it exclusively as a biosecurity issue and close off the entire area right now. He thought we should adopt that approach with kauri dieback.
His colleagues listened politely but did not agree. They adopted a more workable approach.
Still, what they've agreed is a very big thing: the biggest closure of a public park in New Zealand history, they were told.
There had three reasons to take drastic action. One was to try to preserve the inherent value of the Waitakere forest: its lifeforce, its mauri. We are, all of us, the kaitiaki of that forest. Its guardians.