15 Feb 2024

New Zealand’s Antipodes Islands – remote, wild, and special

From Our Changing World, 5:00 am on 15 February 2024
The sheer rocky cliff face of a rugged island rises out of deep blue ocean beneath a blue sky dotted with puffs of white cloud. The top of the island has only grassy/tussock vegetation.

The main Antipodes Island. Photo: Claire Concannon / RNZ

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Excitement rises on board the expedition yacht Evohe as the largest of the Antipodes Islands appears out of the mist.  

These subantarctic islands are wild and remote – some 860km southeast of Rakiura Stewart Island. Their isolation, in a far-flung corner of the South Pacific, means they’re some of the most untouched islands in the world.  

They’re also brimming with wildlife.  

A wildlife hotspot 

Department of Conservation rangers Jemma Welch and Erin Patterson will soon be landing to meet some of the wildlife and start their task: a whole-island count of the Antipodean albatross. Erin dreams of romping through megaherbs, while Jemma, a self-confessed seabird nerd will be in her element – 21 seabird species breed here.   

It’s an incredible landscape. Tussock growing in pillars up to two metres tall, pipits and snipe and parakeets roaming, albatrosses and petrels floating overhead, fur seals and elephant seal pups hauled up in the rocky coves.  

A large gathering of dozens of black-and-white penguins with orange bills and spiky yellow eyebrow crests on the rocks beneath a cliff. Large boulders are covered with tufts of tussock and the ground around the penguins is streaked with white poo.

Tawaki nana hī erect-crested penguins on Antipodes Island. Photo: Claire Concannon / RNZ

With great biodiversity comes great responsibility 

The Antipodes Islands, like the other subantarctic islands, have their own cultural and social history, alongside their incredible natural history.  

In the early 1800s gangs of sealers decimated the fur seal population on these islands. Along the way mice were introduced. Remarkably – and fortunately – rats never established.

A small, chunky mottled brown and beige bird with a long beak walks through the tussock and ferns.

Subantarctic snipe on the Antipodes Island. Photo: Department of Conservation

But the mice were enough to have a major impact. Their population swelled to huge numbers (an estimated 200,000 across the 21 km2 island). This multitude of mice munched their way through a large portion of the native invertebrates on the island – many of which are endemic, meaning they’re not found anywhere else.  

This drop in invertebrates had a knock-on effect: it reduced the amount of food available for insect-loving birds like the pipit and snipe. The mice themselves also disrupted burrowing seabirds. And there was another fear of what might be to come as gruesome footage emerged from other islands where mice had developed the disturbing behaviour of eating live albatross chicks as they sat on the nest.  

For all these reasons, the Million Dollar Mouse project was launched, to eradicate mice from the island. But this would be no easy task. The islands’ geographical isolation and lack of sheltered harbours, coupled with the need to target mice during the winter, made for tricky logistical problems that eradication team manager Stephen (Steve) Horn worked hard to solve.  

Completed in 2016 and declared successful in 2018 after a comprehensive island check, the mice removal has allowed the entire ecosystem to flourish again.   

One of these things is not like the other 

With the Million Dollar Mouse project complete, four out of New Zealand’s five subantarctic island groups are now pest free.  

Now four out of five ain’t bad. But the fifth poses a challenge for Steve. It is the main Auckland Island – the fifth largest island in New Zealand – home to unique biodiversity.  

Rugged and steep cliffs covered with low, grassy vegetation next to deep blue sea.

The rugged western cliffs of Auckland Island. Photo: Department of Conservation

Steve’s team spent three years researching and testing different methods to remove the pigs, mice and cats that are still on the island, and in 2021 released a feasibility report. Like the Antipodes, it’s a massive logistical puzzle, complicated by the sheer size of the island and the number of pests to eradicate. Ridding Auckland Island of pests would cost an estimated $78 million dollars across eight years.  

Listen to the audio to hear what the plan will be – and why, in Steve’s opinion, it’s worth finding the funding for.  

A black feral cat licks its lips while standing atop the body of a large dead albatross on a patch of soil nestled into a rocky cliff face.

A feral cat feeds on a white-capped albatross on Auckland Island. Photo: Department of Conservation

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