A Te Ngāherehere o Kohukohunui / Hūnua Ranges Kauri Population Health Monitoring Survey just published, has revealed no ...
A Te Ngāherehere o Kohukohunui / Hūnua Ranges Kauri Population Health Monitoring Survey just published, has revealed no detectable signs of kauri dieback (P. agathidicida) in the Hūnua Ranges.
The key reason for the upgrade was to protect the tree from kauri dieback, a disease caused by the pathogen Phytophthora agathidicida and spread, among other ways, by soil carried on people's shoes.
Northland MP Grant McCallum noted the deer eradication plan was also helping to reduce the spread of kauri dieback disease, the spores of which live in soil and can be transferred around areas by ...