When I made the following video last night I had not seen the following item.
Tree
deaths across New Zealand after dry conditions followed wet
Widespread tree deaths nationwide affecting whole hillsides have been reported to the Department of Conservation (DOC), after dry conditions followed a wet winter.
Widespread tree deaths nationwide affecting whole hillsides have been reported to the Department of Conservation (DOC), after dry conditions followed a wet winter.
The
usually lush Clutha Southland region has faced very dry conditions
this summer. Photo: RNZ / Tim Brown
2
May, 2019
DOC
botanist Shannel Courtney said the deaths covered a lot of the
northern South Island.
"There
seems to be quite widespread deaths of trees in the Marlborough
Sounds and through the Pelorus catchment, right through into
Kahurangi National Park and down into Nelson Lakes National Park,"
he said.
The
species affected and the extent of the damage varied from place to
place, with native black beech and hard beech trees - which make up
most of the northern South Island forests - worst hit after the dry
season because they grow along ridges and exposed areas.
Another
species, Mahoe, was also dying "en masse", he said.
"I've
also seen instances where a whole hillside has been affected, like in
the upper Takaka Valley where the young tÅtara appear to have died,"
he said.
"We
think that the contrast of the really wet winter followed by an
exceptionally dry summer - where we didn't have rain effectively for
three months - that those extremes have predisposed many trees to be
more susceptible to drought and they weren't conditioned for drought
before the drought hit," he said.
Mr
Courtney said root stress from a very wet winter and spring last year
had weakened the trees and caused root damage, and the extremely dry
conditions that followed were now proving fatal.
He
said in some places it looked as bad, if not worse, than the 2001
drought. Mr Courtney said the effects were still unfolding and we may
not see the full extent for months or another year.
Nelson
helicopter pilot Matt Gibb told the department it was the first time
he had seen so many dead native trees in 25 years of flying around
the area.
"The
ridges especially are speckled with dead trees, including in the
Wairoa Valley and the Wangapeka area of Kahurangi National Park,"
he said. "They are becoming very noticeable."
He
said as the country would likely experience more droughts due to
climate change, we could "expect to see vegetation dieback like
this happening more often".
Regeneration
would only be possible in places where trees were in good health
prior to periods of drought, Mr Courtney said.
The
ability of a forest to bounce back from a drought is reduced if the
underlying vegetation had disappeared due to goats, deer and possums.
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