Abstract

In Aotearoa/New Zealand, the soilborne pathogen Phytophthora agathidicida threatens the survival of the iconic kauri, and the ecosystem it supports. In 2011, a surveillance project to identify areas of kauri dieback caused by Phytophthora agathidicida within the Waitākere Ranges Regional Park (WRRP) highlighted the potential impact of the pathogen. A repeat of the surveillance in 2015/16 identified that approximately a quarter of the kauri area within the Regional Park was infected or possibly infected, an increase from previous surveys. The surveillance program mapped 344 distinct kauri areas and showed that 33.4% of the total kauri areas were affected or potentially affected by kauri dieback and over half (58.3%) of the substantial kauri areas (above 5 ha in size) were showing symptoms of kauri dieback. Proximity analysis showed 71% of kauri dieback zones to be within 50 m of the track network. Spatial analysis showed significantly higher proportions of disease presence along the track network compared to randomly generated theoretical track networks. Results suggest that human interaction is assisting the transfer of Phytophthora agathidicida within the area. The surveillance helped trigger the declaration of a cultural ban (rāhui) on recreational access. Te Kawerau ā Maki, the iwi of the area, placed a rāhui over the kauri forest eco-system of the Waitākere Forest (Te Wao Nui o Tiriwa) in December 2017. The purpose of the rāhui was to help prevent the anthropogenic spread of kauri dieback, to provide time for investment to be made into a degraded forest infrastructure and for research to be undertaken, and to help protect and support forest health (a concept encapsulated by the term mauri). Managing the spread and impact of the pathogen remains an urgent priority for this foundation species in the face of increasing pressures for recreational access. Complimentary quantitative and qualitative research programs into track utilization and ecologically sensitive design, collection of whakapapa seed from healthy and dying trees, and remedial phosphite treatments are part of the cross-cultural and community-enabled biosecurity initiatives to Kia Toitu He Kauri “Keep Kauri Standing”.

Highlights

  • Tāne Mahuta, a Kauri (Agathis australis), is central to the Māori creation myth, separating his parents Ranginui and Papatūānuku, creating light and allowing life to exist and prosper [1]

  • A total of 22,477 kauri trees were surveyed for symptoms of kauri dieback disease

  • A the total of 22,477 kauri trees were surveyed for symptoms of kauri dieback disease during survey generating soil samples for laboratory-based diagnostics to during the survey generating soil samples for laboratory-based diagnostics to determine the presence of Phytophthora agathidicida

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Summary

Introduction

Tāne Mahuta, a Kauri (Agathis australis), is central to the Māori creation myth, separating his parents Ranginui (the sky father) and Papatūānuku (the earth mother), creating light and allowing life to exist and prosper [1]. Kauri has a long geological history and is of cultural significance to the indigenous Māori people. Hapū and iwi are the kaitiaki or guardians of the kauri and have been recognized as essential partners in the long-term management of kauri in the face of past ecological disturbances (logging, gum-tapping, and burn-off to create agricultural land), pest-animal pressures (pigs and possums), recreational demands (track networks) and climate disruption. Over centuries of living off the whenua (land), developed a body of culturally encoded Mātauranga (knowledge) and customs tikanga (customs) related to monitoring and managing environmental health, including that of kauri forest.

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