I remember reading journal stories at school which talked about tuna (eels) and being terrified of them through their descriptions about them lurking in rivers with big teeth.  As a city-born lassie I thought they were everywhere and they would bite my feet off.  Since moving to Wairarapa I understand this is not the case – our eels are in massive decline.

Longfin eel image captured by Alton Perrie at Greater Wellington Regional Council

Longfin eel image captured by Alton Perrie at Greater Wellington Regional Council

Here in Wairarapa DOC, iwi and Greater Wellington Regional Council officers have unofficially decided to spend a year promoting tuna, particularly the endangered longfin, to our community to highlight what an exciting species it is.  Hopefully we can raise awareness and people will start to respect this incredible fish who migrates from Tonga when its only a few millimetres long.

So far this year we’ve got some eel stories in the media including on Good Morning on TVNZ, tuna were a topic that children who attended our Ngahuru, Enviroschool’s Wairarapa day of learning could understand more and see them get fed at Pukaha Mount Bruce where some big longfins live and we were lucky enought to have Caleb Royale, a scientist from Te Wananga o Raukawa, to host a field trip at Papawai marae.

To finish off our year of promotion we’re working with Rangitane o Wairarapa to publish a teacher’s resource on tuna.  Joseph Potangaroa has written up everything he knows about them both scientifically, historically and culturally, found some awesome photographs and developed resources children can do in class to learn. 

Hopefully if we can help bring tuna alive then the next generations will help us to restore our land and stop over-fishing of such an incredible species.

We’re currently drawing up a bid for funding so our plan can become action so watch this space and maybe I’ll upload the document when it comes into action!  Let’s hope everyone can start to develop an understanding of how important tuna are for NZ and not be scared of them any longer.

Here in Wairarapa, goodness gracious I’ve never seen so many eels, that many over here that the drains at Te Hopai used to be 8 feet deep, just a mass of eels going out to sea.  I’ve seen that, and we just put in a big wire, no barb and just pulled them out, out of the drains.  Big wide drains, about 12 feet wide.  The drains were thick with eels.  You could hear them at night like ducks taking off and you know they’re running.
From an interview with Wiremu Aspinall 2001

Some interesting facts about eels you may not know:

  • Eels breed once in their lives and then die
  • Females don’t mature until they’re 34 years old, males until they’re 23-25
  • A female longin eel can have between 1-20 million eggs
  • They swin 6,000 kilometres to deep warm trenches, possibly off the Tongan coast where each eel lays or fertilises eggs.  All the adults then die.
  • The eggs develop into tiny see through creatures called leptocephalus.  These drift on currents back towards the New Zealand coast.
  • Leptocephalus develop into glass eels.  Between July and November large numbers of the tiny eels enter waterways.  A week later glass eels develop dark skin pigment and become elvers.
  • Elvers can climb straight up wet rock faces and other obstacles as they move inland.

More information on tuna can be found on the DOC website, you can watch an edition of TVNZ6 Meet the Locals where they look at eels, you can order a very special DVD called Longfin and you can head to Pukaha Mount Bruce and watch the daily eel feed with DOC rangers.

Round two on the Vietnamese visitor experience trail was a two day trip to Cuc Phuong National Park. Established in 1962 as Vietnam’s first national park (Ho Chi Minh even took time out from the war to formally open it), it is one of the country’s top nature-based tourist attractions. We organised a tour through Handspan Adventure Travel which included return transport from Hanoi to the park and back, meals, accommodation and a guide for our four hour trek.

As well as being a biodiversity hotspot that houses almost 100 different mammal species, over 300 bird species and 2000 species of plants, the park also includes the Cuc Phuong Endangered Primate Rescue Center. This centre helps to breed and rehabilitate some of Vietnam’s rarest primates including the Golden-headed Langur and the Black Crested Gibbon. 

Cuc Phuong Endangered Primate Rescue Center

Cuc Phuong Endangered Primate Rescue Center

We spent an hour or so strolling around the primate centre, where a park warden described all the species we saw and also the importance of a centre like this in a country where poaching of rare animals for the illegal wildlife trade is all too common.

Then we threw some boots on, layered on the mozzie repellant and entered into the park with our guide. In places the forest reminded me of the New Zealand bush (although much, much hotter…), very dense and thick, with mosses and lichens covering almost every tree trunk. Some of the signage was great, as it seemed to be designed in way that meant non-Vietnamese speakers could still understand the point that was trying to be made.

Visitor information at the park entrance

Visitor information at the park entrance

2-1=0, a pretty good way of explaining the damage poaching does...

2-1=0, a pretty good way of explaining the damage poaching does...

The walk was gentle and the track well formed, and just over 3 hours later we were back at our starting point after seeing geckos, chameleons, forest squirrels, huge dragonflies, a 1000-year old tree, probably one of the biggest spiders I’ve ever seen (the size of a dinner plate I kid you not!), and of course being thoroughly wow-ed by our second national park of the trip.

The main difference between here and Cat Ba National Park was most definitely having a guide, we learnt so much more and just generally felt a little safer while in the park. For us, organising trips through travel agencies was the way to go in this part of the world, as the money we might have saved organsing everything ourselves didn’t make up for the hassle and stress of sorting out everything from transport, accommodation, food, park entrance fees and all those other hidden costs… plus it meant knowing all that administrative kind of stuff was all taken care of, we could really immerse ourselves in the places we visited, and take in so much more.

Well that was park number two, and unfortunately our travel plans changed and we ran out of time to get the third park we were hoping to visit. Next time I’ll post about our two day tour of the spectacular Temples of Angkor in Cambodia, which was a whole different visitor experience entirely…

A nice sign to end on :)

Learning about whio

Alison Beath —  25/09/2009

Conservation Week at Ruapehu started with a “Get Involved with Whio” Open Day at the Ohakune Field Centre. What a great time we all had- there was face painting (I never knew Ranger Mel had this hidden talent!), and flax weaving, whio talks, Orautoha School were selling strawberries and daffodils, and whio rangers Bubs and Dean helped kids (and some big kids too!) make stoat trap boxes.

Talking whio with kids at Conservation Week

Talking whio with kids at Conservation Week


These trap boxes will add to the 600 or so we now have out on the river protecting whio in Tongariro Forest. We got 75 ducklings last season- triple the number we used to get before we started predator control! Looking forward to another whio breeding season, we’re expecting our first ducklings in late October. Bring them on! Hope all the other whio workers around the country have an awesome season, fingers crossed for no big floods aye.
One of our 36 pairs of whio protected by the trapping

One of our 36 pairs of whio protected by the trapping

Kia ora, and hope you’ve all been enjoying the great blog posts from my fellow DOCies…

I recently had a month long holiday to Vietnam and Cambodia, and was privileged enough to sample a few protected areas while over there. Although I was going to be away in the lead up to Conservation Week, I was still really keen to contribute to the blog, and seeing that visiting a couple of national parks and other protected areas were at the top of our ‘to-do’ list anyway, I planned to check out how these countries provide their visitor information as a way of linking back to the work I do at DOC.

After arriving in Hanoi and taking in the sites for a few days, we headed to Cat Ba National Park, which sits just south of the UNESCO World Heritage-listed Halong Bay.

After a day and night sailing around Halong Bay, our next day was to Cat Ba Island, of which about half of it’s 140² km has been established as a national park. The park entrance itself was where we got our first taste of visitor information, in the form of an orientation sign packed with images and a reasonable map. Not bad I thought… although the next sign did not fill me with confidence.
The 'map' at the track entrance

The 'map' at the track entrance

We ended up taking the track with the rather general description of ‘go around – not very steep’, which, in my humble opinion, was actually pretty steep.

At this stage I would have loved to have been provided with ANY information about the track, (something like the track category system DOC uses would have been fantastic!), or maybe how long each of the walks would take, as armed with this information (pre-visit preferably) I would have known to wear boots and not my ‘tramping jandles’ which didn’t look like they were going to cut it.

Just to make it all the more fun at this point we got drenched by a monsoon downpour of epic proportions, so to add to the pretty steep track, it was now very slippery. Now, it was rather humbling for someone like myself who can’t understand tramping in New Zealand and coming across people wearing inappropriate gear, as now I got a taste of my own medicine when both my jandels broke mid trek…

Just incase you had forgotten to today...

Just incase you had forgotten to today...

 So now barefoot in the Vietnamese jungle, soaked to the bone and covered in clay from the knee down, we pushed on to Ngu Lam Peak (225m). 200-odd meters doesn’t really sound like a peak, but by this point it felt more like 2000m.

We scrambled up the final section, and realised why we’d started in the first place. An amazing view across heavily forested peaks opened up before us, doubled with an incredibly rusty-looking viewing tower to climb. The walk up the tower was do-able, the walk down (as you’ll see in the picture) was pure terror!

The view out over the park

The view out over the park

One step at a time...

One step at a time...

A wonderful experience, but we could have done with a brochure or two 🙂

Tune in next time for a trip to Cuc Phuong National Park

Jayda Walters giving her dotterel presentation
Robert Parapata’s winning poster
Robert Parapata, James Nolan the runner-up and Carole Long

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