Invasive caulerpa seaweed pictured here at Okupu Beach in Great Barrier. Photo / Sid Wales
The multimillion-dollar Bay of Islands tourism and recreation industry is facing potential economic and environmental ruin, a Northland biosecurity leader is warning.
The warning comes amid the discovery of the invasive superspreader caulerpa seaweed in more than a dozen locations in the tourist mecca.
Exotic caulerpa was identified by Northland Regional Council (NRC) divers making emergency checks in the Bay of Islands in the last week in response to the discovery of the seaweed at Te Rawhiti in the eastern Bay of Islands on May 3.
The find is a first for the New Zealand mainland, outside the pest’s Great Barrier Island stronghold.
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NRC biodiversity and biosecurity working party chair Geoff Crawford said the devastating find in a number of Bay of Islands locations should be a huge wakeup call for the Government and all New Zealanders who live, work or play in the area.
Caulerpa has been found in almost half of the roughly 25 mainland spots investigated including at Omakiwi Cove and Shag Rock off the cove’s nearby Okuia Point. It has also been found off Parorenui Bay.
Crawford said it would be reasonable to expect the seaweed would be found beyond the week’s checked locations.
More than 1000 yachts and launches head to the Bay of Islands annually. Recreational fishing potentially faces huge impacts as well. Many of the boats head to the Bay of Islands from Auckland via Great Barrier Island. Omakiwi is a hugely popular boat anchorage.
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Anchors, rather than boat hulls, are thought to be the main spreading method.
Crawford said boaties in the Bay of Islands needed to be particularly careful about checking their anchors when anchoring in affected areas around Omakiwi.
He said eradication was the only option, even if it took 10 years. Management and control were not.
About 30 eastern Bay of Islands locations have so far been checked by NRC divers with Niwa dive specialists also involved, including Urupukapuka Island.
Te Rawhiti environmental restoration and pest control specialist Rana Rewha (Ngati Kuta) found 10 20cm clumps of caulerpa on the beach at Omakiwi Cove on May 3.
Rewha said he felt lost about “where to from here” after the pest was found on the coast that provided essential kaimoana.
“It’s devastating for the whole Bay of Islands,” Rewha said.
He said caulerpa had the potential to impact cultural, social, environmental, economic and spiritual aspects of life for mana whenua and everybody in the Bay of Islands.
Wellington-based Ministry for Primary Industries (MPI) director readiness and response services John Walsh, who is leading the Government’s caulerpa response, will be among about 150 people expected at a Te Rawhiti marae caulerpa hui on Wednesday.
It’s being held to hear more about its spread and to put in place action towards getting the pest sorted. NRC and Niwa will also be present.
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Rewha said the hui was for all those in the Bay of Islands because the problem affected everybody. Boating clubs, marinas and others were expected to be at the hui.
Business Paihia chair Charles Parker said finding caulerpa at Te Rawhiti and beyond was of significant concern.
“Anything that threatens the natural environment is of concern because we rely so heavily on it to attract visitors,” Parker said.
The natural environment was used in marketing the Bay of Islands, which now included a new marine mammal sanctuary.
Parker said it was important to build a better picture of where caulerpa was in the Bay of Islands. More information would assist decision-making on the best way to eradicate it, if that was possible.
“We eradicate pests on the [Ipiriri] islands, we eradicate pests on the mainland. If we have to fight an invasive seaweed I am sure people would get in behind that,” Parker said.
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Far North District Council Bay of Islands-Whangaroa Community Board member Jane Hindle, from Russell, said finding caulerpa was of concern for the many people who used the Bay of Islands for kaimoana gathering, fishing and recreation.
Caulerpa can grow from a piece the size of a freckle to cover an area the size of a rugby field in just a few weeks. It carpets the sea floor like a horizontal trifid and smothers traditional kaimoana sources such as cockles.
■ Local Democracy Reporting is Public Interest Journalism funded through NZ On Air