Biosecurity NZ ready for a busy summer
Biosecurity New Zealand says that more officers, detector dogs, and airport hosts, accompanied by an enhanced public awareness campaign, will bolster New Zealand’s biosecurity protections this summer.
The current Biosecurity NZ ban on pea growing in the Wairarapa is knocking down the pea weevil population, but another pea weevil-free year is needed to be confident of eradication.
The pest was first discovered in the Wairarapa in 2016 and has been subject to an eradication programme since then.
"Our trapping programme did not find any pea weevils in the 2018 surveillance, which is a promising result after the discovery of just 15 the previous season, says Biosecurity New Zealand spokesperson Dr Cath Duthie.
"It's encouraging progress when you consider the more than 1700 that were detected in the 2016 growing season. We always said the ban would be for a minimum of two years. What we need is two consecutive years of no pea weevils being found before we can confidently say we have eradicated this significant pest.”
Pea weevils lay their eggs in developing peas and the growing larvae feed on the young peas, reducing the yield of pea crops, germination of pea seeds, and potentially threatening our valuable fresh and seed pea exports.
Providing no more weevils are trapped, Biosecurity New Zealand would look at lifting the ban for the 2020/21 growing season. The current ban will continue until 2019/20 growing season is complete.
"We understand the restrictions have had an impact on the pea growing industry and wider Wairarapa community and Biosecurity New Zealand would like to recognise their efforts and support,” says Duthie.
"Growers have shown a great deal of flexibility by finding alternate crops to plant while we've been working to get rid of this pest and that support has been critical in our success so far."
Brendan Attrill of Caiseal Trust in Taranaki has been announced as the 2025 National Ambassador for Sustainable Farming and Growing and recipient of the Gordon Stephenson Trophy at the National Sustainability Showcase at in Wellington this evening.
The next phase of the Taste Pure Nature campaign has been launched in Shanghai, China.
Alliance Group and Grand Farm have signed a strategic co-operation agreement with a focus on delivering more premium New Zealand grass-fed beef to Chinese consumers.
OPINION: Two reports out last week confirm that the worst may be over for pastoral farmers.
Reuters reports that giant food company Wilmar Group has announced it had handed over 11.8 trillion rupiah (US$725 million) to Indonesia's Attorney General's Office as a "security deposit" in relation to a case in court about alleged misconduct in obtaining palm oil export permits.
DairyNZ is celebrating 60 years of the Economic Survey, reflecting on the evolution of New Zealand's dairy sector over time.