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The Problem with Ahuahu Great Mercury Island

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Great Mercury was one of the first sites in New Zealand where humans lived. Māori brought kiore rats to the island. When Europeans arrived, so did ship rats. 

Landscape and ownership

The Mercury Islands are a group of seven islands off the northeast coast of the North Island of New Zealand. They are 8 kilometres east of the Coromandel Peninsula. Ahuahu Great Mercury Island is the largest island in the Mercury Group. It is 1872 hectares.

The two halves to the island are joined by a low flat sandy part. On Ahuahu there is:

  • plantation forest
  • farmland
  • native bush
  • thick scrub
  • high peaks
  • deep valleys
  • large rocks with overhangs
  • several beaches.

Archaeology shows the island didn’t have forest when Polynesians arrived. It was more like scattered pōhutukawa, broadleaf trees, and nīkau. After about 1450 it was mostly shrubs, tutu and bracken.

Two New Zealand businessmen, Michael Fay and David Richwhite, own Ahuahu Great Mercury Island. Although privately owned, the island is open to the public.

A rat plague

Ahuahu Great Mercury Island was one of the very earliest sites inhabited by Māori. The island was also among the first of New Zealand’s habitats affected by kiore rats. Later, Europeans introduced ship rats and cleared land for farming. Over time the island's ecology changed.

By the year 2000, the rodent problem on Great Mercury was high. The Department of Conservation (DOC) placed ink tracking cards around the island to measure rodent distribution. Every single card came back with rat footprints.

There was a risk that pests on Ahuahu could cross the narrow channels to the smaller pest free islands. By this stage feral cats were also becoming a problem.

Pests such as rats and feral cats compete with our native birdlife for food and habitat. They also eat the eggs and young and attack the adults. They are also a major cause of decline for many other species, including reptiles and invertebrates.

What to do?

The smaller islands of the Mercury group are nature reserves. They have benefited from decades of pest management. But farming activities, private ownership and its large size have made conservation management of Ahuahu difficult.

Getting rid of pests needed the active support of the island’s owners. It needed a bold programme of aerial bait drops, followed by ongoing management. It would also be expensive - nearly $1.5 million. DOC did not have the funds.

But the idea of eradicating pests on Ahuahu Great Mercury meant it would be one of the largest pest-free islands in the country yet …

Audio Māori keywords: 


The Mercury Islands are a group of seven islands off the northeast coast of New Zealand's North Island. Image: Google.

On the island there is plantation forest and farmland, with several beaches. Image: Monique Taylor.

There are some areas of native coastal forest and dunes. Image: Andy Hopping.

As well as native coastal forest, there are patches of thick scrub. Image: Monique Taylor.

The introduction of kiore and ship rats had a negative impact on the island's ecology. Image: Rod Morris, Department of Conservation.

The Department of Conservation placed ink tracking cards around the island. Every single card came back with rat footprints. Image: Andrew Penny, LEARNZ.

There was a risk that pests on Ahuahu Great Mercury could cross the narrow channels to the smaller pest free islands. Image: Creative Commons.

Feral cats were also a problem on the island. Image: Andrew Penny, LEARNZ.

«Previous
Archaeology on Ahuahu Great Mercury Island
Next»
Pest Free Island