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Wilding conifers

Pinus spp.

This listing includes cedars, pines, firs, cypress, larches, and spruces.

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What does it look like?

Conifers are woody plants that have cones instead of flowers. Leaves are needle like and have a resinous scent when crushed. They include cedars, pines, firs, cypress, larches, and spruces.  Trees can grow up to 70 metres tall. Wilding conifer is the New Zealand term for introduced conifers that are spreading across the landscape – self-sown and unwanted. Ten introduced conifer species are responsible for most wilding infestations, and are listed for Progressive Containment in Hawkes Bay’s Regional Pest Management Plan.

COMMON NAME

SCIENTIFIC NAME

Douglas Fir

Pseudotsuga menziesii

Contorta pine

Pinus contorta

Scots pine

Pinus sylvestris

Mountain pine and Dwarf mountain pine

Pinus unicinata and Pinus mugo

Bishops pine

Pinus muricata

Maritime pine

Pinus pinaster

Ponderosa pine

Pinus ponderosa

Corsican pine

Pinus nigra

European larch

Larix decidua

Radiata pine

Pinus radiata


Two of these species - radiata pine and Douglas fir - are also important commercial species, but only when the trees are planted in an appropriate place, at suitable spacings, and tended as they grow. 

One species, the lodgepole (contorta) pine has been declared an unwanted organism under the Biosecurity Act 1993, which means it cannot be bred, propagated, distributed or sold.

Wilding conifers can grow in a range of habitats, including grasslands, shrublands, scrub riparian ecosystems and coastal dunes, from high altitudes to near sea level.  Low stature native vegetation and ecosystems such as shrublands are particularly vulnerable to invasion.
Spread by seeds, they can start reproducing at 8 years of age, or even younger in some cases.  Known seed viability ranges from 4 years (Pinus contorta) to 15 years (Pseudotsuga menziesii).

Why is it a problem?

When conifer cones mature on the tree, they open to release masses of wind-blown seeds. These seeds travel kilometres downwind and need no special conditions to take root and grow.

Without control, dense forests can form that have environmental consequences, using up water and altering landscapes significantly, displacing native plants and animals. Wilding conifers are a major problem in areas where there is no native forest, such as above the bush line, in mineral belts and tussock grasslands.

In native forests, wilding conifers compete for space with native trees and plants and don't provide the advantages that native trees do, like food for native birds or insects. Their needles form an acidic carpet which discourages regeneration of native forest floor species.

While wilding conifers are a pest, planted conifers are a valuable resource. For this reason, the ‘wilding conifer’ definition incorporates all ten of the most spread-prone conifer species but specifically applies only to those trees that are naturally regenerated rather than intentionally planted.

Control methods

Herbicide control
Drill holes at 100mm intervals around the trunk and fill with undiluted glyphosate or metsulfuron-methyl (600g/kg e.g. Escort ®) mixed at 20g/L water. Or,
Spray a collar around the trunk with one part triclopyr (eg Grazon®) to three parts biodiesel (eg Codacide®).
CAUTION: When using any herbicide or pesticide, PLEASE READ THE LABEL THOROUGHLY to ensure that all instructions and safety requirements are followed.

More information

On behalf of the Ministry of Primary Industries, we administer the National Wilding Conifer Control Programme in the region where it relates to privately owned land, conducting control operations in areas most affected by wilding conifer spread or to eliminate existing seed sources.

We work collaboratively with regional neighbours – Horizons, Bay of Plenty Regional Council and the Department of Conservation to coordinate these programmes.

We also enforce Plan Rules 7 & 8 which relate to the destruction of wilding conifers present on private land.

Related links

Wilding conifers
Wilding conifers

Management Programme

National Pest Plant Accord (NPPA)

The NPPA is designed to prevent the sale, distribution and propagation of a set list of pest plants (the Accord list) within New Zealand. If allowed to spread further, these pest plants could seriously damage the New Zealand economy and environment.

More information

Progressive Containment Programme

To contain or reduce the geographic distribution of the subject, or an organism being spread by the subject, to an area over time.

Rules

Sections 52 and 53

Sections 52 and 53 of the Biosecurity Act 1993, which prevent the communication, release, spread, sale and propagation of pests, must be complied with.

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