Science ‘We’ve Got to Kill’: Inside Kiwi Mission to Wipe Out Predators - ALL FUCKING BRUSHTAILS MUST FUCKING DIE

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BANKS PENINSULA, New Zealand—Armed with a .22-caliber rifle, a GPS tracker and a dog named Scmack, Jason Millichamp set off into the hills here with a license to kill. His mission: find and eliminate brushtail possums, an intruder that eats baby birds and strips vegetation from native trees.

Millichamp, a 59-year-old former helicopter mechanic, is on the front lines of New Zealand’s drive to be “predator free” by 2050. That means eradicating invasive species such as possums, rats and mustelids—a group that includes weasels, ferrets and stoats.

Millichamp and Scmack, who can locate possums with his nose, are the mop-up team. They are often deployed to find the last few animals, after most possums in an area have been killed with poison and traps.
It’s not an easy job. On their recent expedition at a cattle farm overlooking a picturesque bay, Scmack detected a possum living in a hollow tree on a hillside. By the time Millichamp scrambled up, he couldn’t find it.
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Ollie Rutland-Sims, left, Jason Millichamp and their canine partner Scmack strive to eliminate possums not already killed by poison and traps.
But farther down the trail, Scmack found another possum deep in a cluster of vines. Millichamp poked toward the animal with his walking stick, and then shot it. Scmack retrieved the animal, but it was still alive, so Millichamp had to shoot the possum again.

“Unfortunately, to protect our birds, we’ve got to kill these things,” Millichamp said. “In essence, it shouldn’t be here.”

Countries all over the globe are fighting against invasive species as the world becomes more interconnected. In the U.S., foreign mussels are wreaking havoc in the Great Lakes, invasive fungi are threatening trees in Hawaii and non-native carp are invading rivers and lakes. Many governments employ strict biosecurity rules at points of entry, such as throwing away fresh fruit and meat and inspecting imported wildlife.

New Zealand’s campaign is unusual because it aims to eradicate small, mobile and fast-breeding predators from the entire nation. Increasingly sophisticated traps, equipped with cameras and artificial intelligence that can identify species in real time, are being deployed. Scientists have developed a toxic bait that specifically targets rats and is largely harmless to other animals. Researchers are exploring whether genetic technology can stop some creatures from breeding.

But the effort, introduced nearly a decade ago, is proving controversial. Animal-rights groups are alarmed about the ethics of killing millions of creatures. Some scientists argue that alternative approaches, such as moving threatened animals to sanctuaries with predator-proof fences, might make more sense.

The predator-free plan “retains the dream of permanently eliminating highly fertile and short-lived pests by direct frontal assault—lethal control—over large geographic areas,” said Carolyn King, an emeritus professor at the University of Waikato who has studied stoats. Although the plan is inspiring and has had some local successes, “it has never explained how it can do this at landscape scale,” she said.
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Sources: European Space Agency (imagery); Pest Free Banks Peninsula; Manaaki Whenua – Landcare Research (timeline) Carl Churchill

Up to $6 billion cost​

For this volcanic country in the South Pacific, the plan tackles a legacy of its colonial past. New Zealand’s native animals, including flightless birds like the kiwi, evolved without ground-dwelling mammalian predators. That made them vulnerable to the mammals that arrived with European settlers in the 19th century.

Some native animals are easy prey. Kiwi chicks are likely to be eaten by stoats without some form of predator control. A government report last year estimated that more than 75% of native reptile, bird, bat and freshwater fish species groups are threatened with extinction, or are at risk.
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Scmack can locate possums with his nose.
“Either we accept that we’re on this journey of biodiversity decline, or we do something about it,” said James Willcocks, director of the citywide program to eliminate predators in Wellington, New Zealand’s capital.

Others worry that the goal is unachievable without a radical leap in technology. The target predators often breed faster than they can be removed, catching the last few animals that avoid traps or baits is time-consuming and costly, and guarding against reinvasion is difficult, scientists say.

Airdropped poison baits have been used to eradicate predators from uninhabited islands, but that is a problematic strategy if people live nearby. Another issue: The official plan doesn’t include feral cats, an invasive predator, or non-native animals such as deer and pigs that destroy habitats needed for local fauna to thrive.
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An artsy display of taxidermy contrasts with New Zealand's deadly serious effort to eliminate predators.
Then there is the cost. The latest estimates suggest up to $6 billion will be needed for the campaign to succeed. That could be a challenge for a country of 5.3 million people—roughly the population of South Carolina—that has been struggling economically.

“Most people would love it if rats and possums and stoats would be removed from the country. If you could press a button, almost everyone would do it,” said Ally Palmer, a senior research fellow at the University of Auckland who has studied public perception of the program. “But there are some ongoing concerns about the ‘How?’ And also, about the ‘Can we?’”

On one predator-free island—home to threatened species such as a flightless parrot called the kakapo—the government spent some $295,000 over eight months tracking down a single stoat. Still, that was cheaper than moving the threatened animals and eradicating predators from an entirely new island, officials say. The effort involved trap experts, dogs, trail cameras, setting and monitoring 100 traps, and helicopters to transport people and equipment.

Even some supporters aren’t sure the 2050 nationwide goal is achievable. “I think it’s a pipe dream,” said 83-year-old Georgie Oborne, who lives on the Banks Peninsula, where Millichamp and Scmack track possums. “The money will run out.”
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A pest trap on Banks Peninsula, a hilly, farming area on New Zealand’s South Island.
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A tour guide on Banks Peninsula opens a nesting box with protected native penguins.

Technological leap needed​

Conservation officials say the predator-free plan will become more feasible as new technology comes online, bringing down costs. They compare it to the moon landing—pointing out the U.S. didn’t have the technology to succeed when that goal was announced in the early 1960s.

“If we get this right, we just do this once, and we’ve reset the country and native wildlife can thrive,” said Brent Beaven, the official at New Zealand’s conservation department in charge of the strategy.

In 18 key locations across the country—from rugged mountains to rolling farmlands to the suburbs—conservation groups are experimenting to determine what works best in different environments. One of these is the Banks Peninsula, a hilly, farming area on New Zealand’s South Island that is also popular with retirees and tourists. Visitors can take a tour of a penguin colony nearby.

Possums are the initial target for eradication here. Ollie Rutland-Sims, a 26-year-old operations coordinator for Pest Free Banks Peninsula, the group doing the elimination, estimates 120,000 possums lived in the 90 square miles in the project’s first phase. He figures in about 35 square miles, there are just a few individual possums left.

“We’ve been really blown away with how large the population is in a lot of places,” he said.

Their strategy is multifaceted. Initially, the conservationists install plastic containers with toxic bait in trees, with self-resetting kill traps often placed along borders to slow new animals from coming in. The possum-tracking dog will later do a sweep, and if needed, the team will deploy extra traps to take out survivors that didn’t go for the bait.

The conservationists then move into neighboring areas with the bait, leaving behind traps and cameras to protect against and monitor for reinvasion. They’ll send in the possum-tracking dog if invaders get through, though the traps can be a good defense. On a recent afternoon, more than 10 possum carcasses were piled up under one trap, set in a tree on the side of a road.
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Some residents worry that the use of toxic bait could harm pets and the local environment. Photo: Tatsiana Chypsanava for The Wall Street Journal

Concerns about poisons​

Many people are supportive of the project, though some locals are unsettled by the use of poison. David Kinnaird, 54, who runs a guest lodge on the Banks Peninsula, was happy to allow tracker dogs and certain traps that catch animals alive—but said no to toxic bait. He was worried about his pet cat, and contaminating local water sources.

“For me, it’s around the unintended consequences of those toxins,” Kinnaird said.

The conservation group says the risk to pets is low given how they deploy the poison, that they wouldn’t put toxins near water sources, and that toxins are the most efficient way to reduce possum numbers quickly. They say that they aim to kill animals in the most humane way possible and that it is up to landowners to decide which methods to permit on their property.

Supporters of the 2050 plan say there are already important achievements. About 450 square miles across the country are newly free from at least some of the target predators, according to Predator Free 2050, a government-owned company set up to implement the program. Bird counts are up in some areas where predator elimination work has occurred, it says.
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More than three-quarters of New Zealand's native reptile, bird, bat and freshwater fish species groups are threatened with extinction, or are at risk, the government says.
In Wellington, one of the 18 locations where conservation groups are experimenting, the citywide group used thousands of traps and bait stations, tracker dogs, hundreds of cameras, and reports from community members to eliminate rats and mustelids from the suburban Miramar peninsula (possums were already gone). Another project has reintroduced kiwis to the hills around Wellington after a trapping campaign reduced predator numbers.

The Wellington group is pushing into new neighborhoods toward the downtown, while maintaining a vigilant watch for invaders. Some weeks ago, a community member noticed a dead rat that a tracker dog later traced to firewood that had recently been delivered.

“We’re reasonably confident that we can do possums,” said Rob Forlong, chief executive of Predator Free 2050. “With rats and stoats, they are a lot harder.”

Toni Williams, 52, who lives on the Banks Peninsula, said he has seen a three- or fourfold increase in the number of tui, a native bird, at a feeder near his house.

At first, he was skeptical possums could be eliminated from the area. Now, he thinks there is a chance.

“I can see the results myself,” he said.
 
I knew someone once who had a dog that loved bushtail possums. The dog wouldn't hurt them it'd just find them and pick them up and run around with them in its mouth. It'd then run to the closest person it could find and drop it at their feet. The possum, who is completely unharmed but terrified, tries to escape from the dog by climbing the nearest thing taller than the dog. So what happens is a person is walking along, a dog runs over carrying something, the dog drops it at their feet, suddenly a pissed off possum climbs them leaving scratches all up them with its sharp claws, then about 50% of the time the possum would piss itself while clinging to the persons head
 
A worthy and necessary, albeit unpleasant task. However, this
For this volcanic country in the South Pacific, the plan tackles a legacy of its colonial past. New Zealand’s native animals, including flightless birds like the kiwi, evolved without ground-dwelling mammalian predators. That made them vulnerable to the mammals that arrived with European settlers in the 19th century.
...is disingenuous as fuck. Absolutely European settlement was/is disastrous to native wildlife, but the Maori severely worked over the place first. As well as directly wiping out the multiple species of moa, they introduced dogs and the Polynesian rat. If you do a little research, you can see how the Polynesians landed in New Zealand, flourished for a couple of centuries, and then had a major population crash courtesy of hunting and land management practices that rival any European clusterfuck.

This sort of thinking- "we must not cause offence or suggest that the pure, child like savages ever fucked up the way we did" - is at best the embodiment of white saviour bullshit, at worst it causes huge problems when it comes to understanding how human migrations affect the world around us, and how we eventually have to adapt to what we have, not what we want.
 
Millichamp said. “In essence, it shouldn’t be here.”

out of context these are some based quotes

A worthy and necessary, albeit unpleasant task. However, this

...is disingenuous as fuck. Absolutely European settlement was/is disastrous to native wildlife, but the Maori severely worked over the place first. As well as directly wiping out the multiple species of moa, they introduced dogs and the Polynesian rat. If you do a little research, you can see how the Polynesians landed in New Zealand, flourished for a couple of centuries, and then had a major population crash courtesy of hunting and land management practices that rival any European clusterfuck.

This sort of thinking- "we must not cause offence or suggest that the pure, child like savages ever fucked up the way we did" - is at best the embodiment of white saviour bullshit, at worst it causes huge problems when it comes to understanding how human migrations affect the world around us, and how we eventually have to adapt to what we have, not what we want.

you dont know how much i despise the 'noble savage' myth. whether it be the maori, or the native americans are some kind of peace loving hippies. or the we need to replace Columbus day with one celebrating the Aztec; you know, the civilization which kidnapped women from neighboring villages to engage in barbaric human sacrifice. or let's ignore all the cannibalism of some of these 'indigenous' groups i really hate the whitewashing of these groups as all being great and amazing while all europeans were literally hitler.
 
I've wasted loads of possums. Used to enjoy driving along the former State Highway around the Western side of Lake Taupo, late at night, and running over dozens of possums on the way.
They often crouch down when they see your headlights, so the trick is to blast your horn just as you drive over them, which startles them into raising their heads and, BAM!, you crack their skulls with the underside of your car.
 
you dont know how much i despise the 'noble savage' myth. whether it be the maori, or the native americans are some kind of peace loving hippies. or the we need to replace Columbus day with one celebrating the Aztec; you know, the civilization which kidnapped women from neighboring villages to engage in barbaric human sacrifice. or let's ignore all the cannibalism of some of these 'indigenous' groups i really hate the whitewashing of these groups as all being great and amazing while all europeans were literally hitler.
All cultures, tribes, religions, and peoples have their good practices, their neutral practices, their bad practices, and practices that should be nuked from space.

Celebrate the good, and emulate it if possible. Acknowledge, understand, and eradicate the destructive.
 
the civilization which kidnapped women from neighboring villages to engage in barbaric human sacrifice.
The ones everyone hated so much Cortes was able to levy 100,000 native warriors to help him and the rest of the conquistadors defeat them. Their worthless civilization and culture deserved to be eradicated.
 
The ones everyone hated so much Cortes was able to levy 100,000 native warriors to help him and the rest of the conquistadors defeat them. Their worthless civilization and culture deserved to be eradicated.
it's funny how that part always gets left out of history books. i remember learning about cortes in school and not a single mention was made of his native allies. jut him and a small band of conquistadors wiping out an entire civilization. it wasnt until much later than i learned he was able to get all the neighboring tribes to join him because of how hated the aztecs were; honestly, the version taught in highschool makes him sound like history's biggest badass; big dick cortes cucks virign mexican tribe.
 
The ones everyone hated so much Cortes was able to levy 100,000 native warriors to help him and the rest of the conquistadors defeat them. Their worthless civilization and culture deserved to be eradicated.
Honestly, I think that the Aztec culture has significant parallels to old style Christianity and pretty much every branch of Islam. Their religion and culture centred around power, domination, conquest, and their God given superiority over the heathen. When you regard X group of people as inherently inferior, and that it's your moral duty to correct or exterminate the subhuman, pretty much any conceivable cruelty committed against them is acceptable, if not encouraged.

The downside to this is that is that anyone you leave alive will despise you in every conceivable way, and if the opportunity ever arises to remove you from the human census, they're going to take it.

That's why empires die if they don't continually expand and successfully force assimilation on their subjects. Islam is so successful not because of their spiritual superiority, but because it's their religious and moral duty to kill or convert anyone who isn't Muslim.

Christianity used to be the same, but Henry the 8th struck the first blow against it when he decided to marry Anne Boelyn.
 
Christianity used to be the same, but Henry the 8th struck the first blow against it when he decided to marry Anne Boelyn.
That's ludicrous. Christians never raided other cultures for captives to perform human sacrifices at any time in history and neither did Muslims. The Aztecs' behavior was so egregious even other native cultures with zero exposure to anything besides Mesoamerica hated them.

Human sacrifice hadn't even been practiced in Europe for nearly 2,000 years by the time of the Spanish arrival in Mexico and even that time was a one-off event during the desperation of post-Cannae in the Punic Wars that never recurred.
 
Human sacrifice hadn't even been practiced in Europe for nearly 2,000 years by the time of the Spanish arrival in Mexico and even that time was a one-off event during the desperation of post-Cannae in the Punic Wars that never recurred.
Weren't there some examples of human sacrifice during pre-Christian Scandinavia, as well as during some points in the Danelaw?
 
I've wasted loads of possums. Used to enjoy driving along the former State Highway around the Western side of Lake Taupo, late at night, and running over dozens of possums on the way.
They often crouch down when they see your headlights, so the trick is to blast your horn just as you drive over them, which startles them into raising their heads and, BAM!, you crack their skulls with the underside of your car.
What the fuck is wrong with you?
 
A worthy and necessary, albeit unpleasant task. However, this

...is disingenuous as fuck. Absolutely European settlement was/is disastrous to native wildlife, but the Maori severely worked over the place first. As well as directly wiping out the multiple species of moa, they introduced dogs and the Polynesian rat. If you do a little research, you can see how the Polynesians landed in New Zealand, flourished for a couple of centuries, and then had a major population crash courtesy of hunting and land management practices that rival any European clusterfuck.

This sort of thinking- "we must not cause offence or suggest that the pure, child like savages ever fucked up the way we did" - is at best the embodiment of white saviour bullshit, at worst it causes huge problems when it comes to understanding how human migrations affect the world around us, and how we eventually have to adapt to what we have, not what we want.
It's malicious as shit but still hilarious how the same tards that shout about deforestation, racism and climate change would ooo and coo over the tribal retards on easter island who isolated themselves to death by chopping down all the trees so they could roll giant statues around. Native Americans were so good at deforestation that some speculate the mass burning of trees in America contributed to a mini ice age in Europe. But tell that to a modern day white savior and they will argue that no, evil white people colonizing the world is why Africans have lived in shit and mud huts for thousands of years.
 
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