OPINION:
The New Zealand rural landscape is a dynamic thing, and always has been since becoming subject to man’s influence. Today, however, it is going through a change which may be not what we want, or more particularly, not what future generations would want. Furthermore, that change will essentially be irreversible.
One manifestation of this is the spread of urban development over our productive flat land. The other, a more recent phenomenon, is the spread of pine trees (pinus radiata) over low country farmland. Our food-producing footprint is being squeezed. The pine invasion has received attention in this paper in recent days.
New Zealand has a love/hate relationship with pines, and the latter is overwhelming the former. But we must not be too hard on this prodigious species, for it provides virtually all the timber for our construction needs as lumber and roundwood. Furthermore, it earns about $10 billion in overseas income, bested only by meat (just) and dairy produce (double the amount).
Today, the advance of pines is causing increasing public concern, but it’s like the weather; everyone moans about it, but no-one does anything to fix it (perhaps not the best analogy in the era of attempts at climate mitigation).