Springfield Golf Club. Photo / File
For the past 60-plus years the Springfield Golf Club, due to its diligent caretaking and pest-control strategies, has created stable and secure habitats for many native species that have made the trees, streams or wetlands their home and/or hunting grounds.
The native birds alone comprise an impressive list including New
Zealand's most-threatened bird of prey, the karearea (NZ falcon), the endangered kaka as well as the korimako (bellbird), grey warbler, tui, kereru (NZ wood pigeon), ruru (NZ owl or morepork), piwakawaka (fantail), pukeko and paradise duck.
Other native wildlife such as the NZ longfin eel and koura are also present and according to expert advice the course provides the ideal environment for the critically threatened NZ long tailed bat found elsewhere in Rotorua.
Saving the Springfield Golf Course in its entirety is vitally important to ensure the habitats of our native wildlife remain undisturbed and that this precious treasure (taonga) will be preserved for future generations of wildlife and people to enjoy.
Deanna Paterson
Rotorua