Waikato Regional Council is taking control of wilding pines in new locations in the Coromandel Peninsula after receiving funding from the Ministry of Primary Industries' wilding pine control programme.
The new locations for control work include Opito Bay and Whenuakite, with work already completed at Black Jack Reserve and on AhuAhu/Great Mercury Island. Work continues on the Matarangi Bluff Scenic Reserve. In Whenuakite, the control sites are on a total of about 108ha of private land in Boat Harbour Rd.
Waikato Regional Council project manager Clark McMichael says mature coning trees will be controlled by drilling and filling with herbicide or chainsawing, while seedlings and smaller trees will be hand-pulled or hand-sawn.
"Wilding pines are a threat to biodiversity and the primary sector and, if nothing is done to control them, within 30 years they will have taken over significant parts of New Zealand's iconic landscapes and unique natural habitats."