The Environmental Protection Authority has approved the introduction of a root-feeding beetle to control the noxious weed moth plant.
The application to introduce the moth plant beetle into New Zealand was made by the Waikato Regional Council, acting on behalf of a consortium of regional councils and the Department of Conservation known as the National Biocontrol Collective.
New Zealand is the first country to make a collaborative effort to discover an effective biological control agent for moth plant (Araujia hortorum).
The NZ National Biocontrol Collective pools resources to fund its programmes and collaborates with researchers in Uruguay, who assisted with the collection of Freudeita cf cupripennis and obtaining export permits so the beetles could be shipped from there.
High mortality rates of moth plant were noted at field sites in Uruguay this year.
EPA general manager of hazardous substances and new organisms, Dr Fiona Thomson-Carter, says vines of the weed smother native plants and can injure animals.