'Clip board' council out of touch
Commercial grower Bruce Rollison says he's spending a lot of time dealing with existing regulations and planning to deal with new ones that keep appearing.
Last week two international students joined the Horizons Regional Council’s pest plant team to go on the hunt for bio-control insects.
Horizons environmental officer plants Neil Gallagher says bio-control is a technique used worldwide to restore balance between a weed and the environment by recruiting some of its key natural enemies.
“Pest plants that have been introduced to New Zealand are often not considered a weed in their home country because there are bio-agents there to control them,” he says.
“If it can be determined what these agents are, they can be released in key areas to help fight against weeds such as California thistle, nodding thistle and woolly nightshade. Our team has been active in getting bio-agents established in the Region so were more than happy to host students studying bio-control.”
Horizons staff took student Darwin Hickman from the University of Birmingham and Cecilia Falla-Mata from Guatemala to sites where a number of bio-control beetles, flies, and bugs had been released.
“Our team is really keen to learn everything we can about bio-control. So while assisting Darwin and Cecilia with their visit and helping them collect data, we were also soaking up any new information they could share in order to increase the success of the programme,” says Gallagher.
“We took the students to Pohangina Valley, Ohingaiti, and Utiku and were pleased to find thistle bio-agents had taken a noticeable toll on pasture weeds. In particular the Pohangina site showed at least 50 per cent of thistles were damaged by green thistle beetles and reducing the amount of thistle present.”
Gallagher says New Zealand’s bio-control programme is recognised internationally as being an efficient, safe, and robust system.
“The impressive thing about our programme is that using bio-agents hasn’t impacted negatively on our native plants or agricultural and horticultural crops. This is one of the reasons why students are coming here to see how things work.”
Managing director of Woolover Ltd, David Brown, has put a lot of effort into verifying what seems intuitive, that keeping newborn stock's core temperature stable pays dividends by helping them realise their full genetic potential.
Within the next 10 years, New Zealand agriculture will need to manage its largest-ever intergenerational transfer of wealth, conservatively valued at $150 billion in farming assets.
Boutique Waikato cheese producer Meyer Cheese is investing in a new $3.5 million facility, designed to boost capacity and enhance the company's sustainability credentials.
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