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Hunter-led conservation project helps boost the health of Kaimanawa Forest Park

  • Hon Todd McClay

A hunter-led conservation project has removed hundreds of deer from a remote part of the Kaimanawa Forest Park, helping improve the forest’s health, Hunting and Fishing Minister Todd McClay says.

“An innovative hunter-led project has seen 776 deer removed from the Kaimanawa Remote Experience Zone (REZ) since 2022, thanks to the Sika Foundation project.

“The project received some funding from the Government’s Jobs for Nature programme and DOC’s Wild Animal Management Programme.

“The remoteness of the REZ limits opportunity for hunters to walk in, which means we do not see much recreational deer harvest in this part of the forest.

Minister McClay says, “Due to historic sustained overpopulation, some habitat within the REZ is in a poor state, affecting the forest’s regrowth.

“Managing deer numbers can help improve forest health and resilience to climate change and reduce pressure on native ecosystems.

“A thriving natural environment and fewer high-quality animals creates a better hunting experience.

“While successfully lowering deer numbers, the project also set up vegetation and deer density monitoring, which will be remeasured in 2025 to track the response in the habitat from management efforts.

“New and innovative management tools – such as thermal assisted aerial hunting, thermal drone assisted ground hunting, and app-based data collection and mapping tools to track the herd response to hunting – are all showing huge value for future management in Kaimanawa Forest Park and other sites.

As well as the deer management project, the Sika Foundation has a range of other conservation projects underway, including managing a trapping network to protect whio (blue ducks) and carrying out hut maintenance.

“It’s great to see work like this coming from the hunting community. Hunters are close to our land and waters and do great work to look after our natural environment, showing that conservation and recreation can work in harmony.

“There is an opportunity to align more of New Zealand’s hunting activities with conservation objectives.

“If people are making most of summer and going hunting, make sure you store and transport firearms and ammunition appropriately, and follow the seven rules of firearm safety.”

View the seven rules of firearm safety here:

Rule 6: Store and transport firearms and ammunition safely. When travelling with a firearm, you need to:

  • fully unload the chamber, breech, and magazine
  • make it inoperable by removing the bolt/other vital part, or by fitting a trigger/cable lock, and/or store it in a locked case
  • conceal it from view in the vehicle
  • store and secure ammunition separately
  • Learn more about storage and transportation of firearms and ammunition on the Firearms Safety Authority’s website.

/Public Release. View in full .