A long-running community-driven project to a restore a rare and culturally significant 55ha Far North dune lake is the latest to benefit from central government funding to get rid of wilding pines around Northland.
Lake Ngatu, inland from Waipapakauri Ramp, is a Department of Conservation recreation reserve, popular with water sport enthusiasts, where NgaiTakoto, Northland Regional Council, Far North District Council, DoC and landowners are working to tackle huge wilding pines. Some are a century old and two metres thick, and are threatening to dominate the lake and its surrounds.
Regional councillor Colin Kitchen said the Lake Ngatu wilding pine work was one of a growing number of projects given money from a $1 million Ministry for Primary Industries' fund that was providing employment for forestry workers affected by Covid-19 job losses.
One of the Sweetwater dune lakes, it was a habitat to a number of threatened animals and plants, including the dune lake dwarf inanga and the New Zealand dabchick.
Kaio Hooper, NgaiTakoto's environmental asset manager, said it was a historic site and an ecological taonga for the iwi, not least as home to kuta, a native reed that filters out pollutants in the water.