Australasian Leisure Management
Nov 22, 2023

Greater Wellington Regional Council plants a million trees

In the name of Papatūānuku (the Māori tradition of the land) the Greater Wellington Regional Council has planted over 922,000 seedlings in parks, wetlands, rivers and erosion-prone land across over the winter months.

the region, with the help of Indigenous people (mana whenua), keen landowners, schools and community groups, 80% of the young trees were native species.

Praising those who supported the ambitious project, Greater Wellington Environment Committee Chair, Penny Gaylor stated “planting nearly a million trees in a few months is a restoration effort of extraordinary scale, but together, we’ve adorned Papatūānuku (Mother Earth) in a magnificent million-tree cloak.

“A forest is a community - rich with diversity and connections - much like our local communities. Our community planting days were hugely successful, where everyone came together in the name of Papatūānuku.

“Projects to restore our forests and natural spaces are at the heart of Greater Wellington’s kaupapa as kaitiaki of our environment and active responders to climate change.”

Ecosystems and Community Manager David Boone says when it comes to tree planting, there can never be too much of a good thing, noting “our team’s careful planning led to the thousands of seedlings now spread across our regional parks, natural spaces and private land, ensuring the right tree, in the right place, for the right purpose. 

“Tree planting is one of the most important roles we can play in regenerating our ecosystems. This year’s winter planting included Greater Wellington’s Recloaking Papatūānuku programme, which will steadily phase out grazing in our regional parks, covering former farmland in native bush.

“Our planting programmes also support private landowners who want to save their soils, protect their waterways and improve water quality in their catchments.”

There are now:

  • 362,300 more native plants in Wellington’s regional parks

  • 34,850 more native plants in and around the Wairarapa Moana wetlands

  • 282,400 more plants preventing hill country erosion across the region.

  • 64,000 more native plants enhancing our river management and flood protection systems.

  • 135,700 more native plants on private land, complementing river care, biodiversity and land retirement initiatives led by landowners.

Advising that Greater Wellington is incorporating more eco-sourced seedlings into its planting programmes,  Akura Nursery officer Rachel Scanlan added “Indigenous species take one to three years to grow from seed to seedling. Here in the Wairarapa, 89% of the seeds we collate are eco-sourced, which means seeds are collected, germinated, and returned as plants to their original area.

“Eco-sourced or locally-grown trees mean the seedlings grow well in local conditions and enrich the biodiversity rather than replace it. 

“To prevent hill country erosion, we plant exotic species like willows and poplars. They grow quickly, producing vast root networks that bind soil and prevent mass movement. In some areas, exotics are planted with natives to provide shelter - a kind of natural nursery for the slower-growing natives.”

The planting of nearly a million trees required a range of funding sources, including Greater Wellington’s own Low Carbon Acceleration Fund to help reach its carbon neutral goals, the government’s Climate Emergency Response Fund, the One Billion Trees programme, and the resources of private landowners.

Image credits: Greater Wellington Regional Council.

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