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Grovetown Lagoon Education Kit CONTENTS 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. Introduction............................................................................................................................................ 2 Learning Outcomes ............................................................................................................................... 2 Using this resource ................................................................................................................................ 2 Grovetown Lagoon ................................................................................................................................ 2 Getting there........................................................................................................................................... 3 Facilities Checklist................................................................................................................................. 3 Hazards ................................................................................................................................................... 3 Background Information ...................................................................................................................... 3 Lagoons and Wetlands .................................................................................................................................... 3 Is Grovetown Lagoon really a lagoon?........................................................................................................... 3 Oxbow lake formation .................................................................................................................................... 3 What are wetlands?......................................................................................................................................... 4 Marlborough’s Wetlands ................................................................................................................................ 4 Cultural Importance ........................................................................................................................................ 4 Flood Control.................................................................................................................................................. 5 Water quality .................................................................................................................................................. 5 Recreation....................................................................................................................................................... 5 Exceptional habitats........................................................................................................................................ 5 9. Grovetown Lagoon themes................................................................................................................... 5 Succession ......................................................................................................................................................... 5 What is succession? ........................................................................................................................................ 5 Succession at Grovetown Lagoon................................................................................................................... 6 Activities about succession............................................................................................................................. 6 Competition ...................................................................................................................................................... 7 What is competition? ...................................................................................................................................... 7 Invasive plants at Grovetown Lagoon ............................................................................................................ 7 Human intervention in plant competition ....................................................................................................... 7 Activities about Competition .......................................................................................................................... 8 Changes in land use ......................................................................................................................................... 8 Maori use of the area ...................................................................................................................................... 8 Degradation and restoration............................................................................................................................ 8 Activities about Changes in Land Use............................................................................................................ 8 10. Succession Activities ............................................................................................................................. 9 WETMAK vegetation plot monitoring .......................................................................................................... 9 Plant a tree ...................................................................................................................................................... 11 How is our forest growing? - Measure a tree ............................................................................................. 12 11. Competition Activities......................................................................................................................... 14 Who’s winning? - competition at Grovetown Lagoon............................................................................... 14 12. Changes in land use Activities............................................................................................................ 15 Make a Grovetown Lagoon Management Plan .......................................................................................... 15 Grovetown Lagoon Scavenger Hunt............................................................................................................ 16 13. APPENDIX ........................................................................................................................................... 16 Plant identification basics............................................................................................................................. 16 Related activities ............................................................................................................................................ 17 Sound map .................................................................................................................................................... 17 Leaf rubbing ................................................................................................................................................. 17 Activities from the Tiro Oneone (Living Landscape )Kit............................................................................. 18 Acknowledgements: Thanks to the Grovetown Lagoon Restoration Trust for their advice and support. Department of Conservation PO Box 51, Renwick Blenheim 7243 Ph 03 5729100 [email protected] Published June 2013 1 1. Introduction Grovetown Lagoon is a beautiful and interesting area just outside of Blenheim that provides a great opportunity for learning, for students of all ages. Activities in this kit will help your students increase their awareness and knowledge about our wetlands by taking a closer look at the natural processes that are happening there, as well as learning how they can make a difference to the restoration of the area. The theme for Grovetown Lagoon activities is Transitions. Many of the ecological processes occurring in the area are a transition from one state to another. These include; Succession – the transition from bare land to pioneer species to mature forest. The students can plant trees as part of this theme. Competition – looking at competition between native plants and invasive plants (weeds), the effects of this and the outcomes of our intervention. Changes in land use – the history of the area including the formation of the oxbow loop that is now the Lagoon, traditional Maori use of the area, invasion of weeds and the degradation of the ecosystem, and the current restoration of the natural values of the area. 2. Learning Outcomes …in progress…. 3. Using this resource The Grovetown Lagoon Kit is designed to be used by primary and high school teachers and students, either with or without a representative from the Department of Conservation. Background information is provided on relevant topics, and activities based on the themes for this kit are explained. Some activities are appropriate for all ages, others are more appropriate for a particular age group. Included in the kit is all the equipment you will need to carry out all the activities. You will need to provide specialist equipment such as cameras, if required. Some activities collect data that is collated by DOC and added to by each class that does the activity. Please contact DOC South Marlborough before you do these activities, so you can get the latest data to compare your class’s findings to (03 5729100 or [email protected]) 4. Grovetown Lagoon Grovetown Lagoon is one of the few natural wetlands remaining on the Wairau Plain, with areas of open water, swampy ground, springs and adjoining land. Historically, the lagoon and adjoining wetlands and waterways were considered a mahinga kai (food resource) by iwi and as such these were highly valued for the abundance of freshwater foods and resources such as inanga (whitebait), tuna (eel) and pateke (brown teal). Grovetown Lagoon is an oxbow loop of the Wairau River – a loop that used to be part of the main channel but was cut off as the flow altered the river’s course. Over the years, long-term neglect of the riparian margins and discharges into the lagoon had resulted in a degraded waterbody. There has been much work done on restoring the Lagoon, and today it is a beautiful place to visit, with varied biodiversity values. There is a wetland area adjacent to the lagoon (classified as a swamp). Swamps are fertile wetlands that occupy basins, valley floors, deltas, and plains. They are fed by both 2 groundwater and abundant surface runoff so receive a regular supply of nutrients and sediments from adjacent land. The Grovetown Lagoon Working Group (made up of three local iwi, community representatives, NZ Landcare Trust, Fish and Game, Department of Conservation and Marlborough District Council) has worked since 2003 to enhance the habitat for fish and bird life, and to enable gathering of food and encourage recreational uses. http://www.marlborough.govt.nz/Environment/Land/Ecology-Projects/LandcareGroups/Grovetown-Lagoon-Restoration-Project.aspx The Grovetown Lagoon Restoration Trust has regular working bees doing planting, weed control, planting maintenance and track building. For more information, please contact Jenny Keene on 03 572 7288. Despite the invasions of introduced plant and animal pests, the Lagoon provides habitat for a colony of Little Shags, the uncommon swamp nettle and swamp buttercup, and healthy populations of common bully, shortfinned eels and inanga (whitebait). 5. Getting there Off State Highway 1, at Grovetown (3km north of Blenheim) turn onto Fell Street, and veer right onto Steam Wharf Road. Follow the road to the parking area just past the Wairau Rowing Club building. There is parking and turning room here. 6. Facilities Checklist Parking: ample for buses and cars Flush toilets and drinking water available at the Wairau Rowing Club by contacting [email protected] in advance. Open space for games Picnic areas Easy short walking track 7. Hazards Steam Wharf Road is narrow – use caution when driving to the site. Deep flowing river water (in the Wairau)- all necessary precautions should be taken near the waterways Weather can be unpredictable, be prepared for all conditions. 8. Background Information Lagoons and Wetlands Is Grovetown Lagoon really a lagoon? Lagoons are shallow coastal bodies of water separated from the ocean by a barrier of some kind (islands, spits, bars). Grovetown Lagoon could be loosely defined as a lagoon, as it is influenced by the tidal flow, as are the lower reaches of the Wairau River. This influence is much less than it was, due to the building of stop banks, and the controlling of water flow in and out of the lagoon. Grovetown Lagoon was formed as an oxbow lake. Oxbow lake formation An oxbow lake is formed when a river creates a meander, due to the river's eroding the bank through hydraulic action, abrasion and corrosion. After a long period of time, the meander becomes very curved, and eventually the neck of the meander will become narrower and the river will cut through the neck at a time of flood, cutting off the meander and forming an oxbow lake. See these links for animations and photos of the formation process. 3 http://googleearthtimemachine.blogspot.fr/2012/07/angleton-texas.html http://www.cleo.net.uk/resources/displayframe.php?src=309/consultants_resources/_files /meander4.swf Grovetown Lagoon is a relatively recent oxbow (the river broke through in 1868) but represents one of the last significant components of a freshwater wetland that once covered the lower Wairau Plain. Figure 1. Grovetown Lagoon from the air, showing the oxbow lake shape. What are wetlands? Wetlands are areas where water is the primary factor controlling the environment and the associated plant and animal life. They occur where the water table is at or near the surface of the land, or where the land is covered by water, either permanently or temporarily. They come in many different guises, including streams, swamps, bogs, lakes, lagoons, estuaries, mudflats and flood plains. Wetlands are among the world’s most productive environments. They are cradles of biological diversity, providing the water and primary productivity upon which countless species of plants and animals depend for survival. Many of these plants and animals have specially adapted to living in wet places. They are also essential in managing climate change. Healthy peat bogs are year-round sinks of 2-5 tonnes of carbon per hectare – locking it up in their soil indefinitely. Marlborough’s Wetlands Over 90 percent of New Zealand’s wetlands have been drained or filled. The Marlborough landscape of the 1840’s was very different to today. Very large areas of wetlands were once found in the lowlands of Marlborough, particularly around the Blenheim area. The wetlands have now been almost eliminated with approximately 1 % of the original freshwater wetland area remaining on the Wairau Plain. The Wairau Lagoons area makes up a large part of this. This means that each and every one of our remaining wetlands is worthy of protection and restoration. Cultural Importance The Wairau Plains area has always been very important to our local iwi - Rangitane, Ngati Rarua and Ngati Toa Rangitira. In general, wetlands were a treasure trove for early Maori, providing abundant supplies of flax for clothing, mats, kits and ropes; raupo for thatching and dried moss for bedding; the eels, fish and birds which lived there were a good food source; and the feathers of birds like the pukeko and bittern were used to adorn cloaks and other garments. Waterways were an important means of access by waka (canoe). 4 Flood Control Wetlands absorb water during heavy rain, releasing water gradually so flooding is reduced. Downstream water flows and ground water levels are also maintained during periods of low rainfall. Wetlands help stabilise shorelines and riverbanks. Water quality As water moves into a wetland, the flow rate decreases, allowing particles to settle out. Plant surfaces provide for filtration, absorption of solids and add oxygen to the water. Growing plants remove nutrients. This cleansing role of wetlands protects downstream environments. Recreation The Grovetown Lagoon area offers a wide variety of recreation activities including kayaking, fishing, bird watching, white-baiting and duck shooting. Exceptional habitats A huge range of plants and animals inhabit wetlands. Wetland plants include 47 species of rush and 72 species of native sedge. Many of these plants have very specific environmental needs and are extremely vulnerable to change. A number of New Zealand’s endangered plant species depend totally on wetlands. Wetlands now cover a very small percentage of New Zealand’s land area, but are home to 22% of our native land bird species. Wetlands support the greatest concentrations of bird life of any habitat in New Zealand and support far more species that a comparable forest area. Migratory species depend on chains of suitable wetlands. The survival of threatened species such as the Australasian bittern, brown teal, fernbird, marsh crake and white heron relies on New Zealand’s remnant wetlands. Native fish need wetlands too. Eight of New Zealand’s 27 species including inanga, shortfinned eels, kokopu and bullies are found in wetlands while the whitebait fishery depends on the spawning habitat offered by freshwater wetlands. The best whitebait runs are found on the West Coast of the South Island where extensive areas of forest and swamp remain. The decline in native fish populations is directly related to massive reductions in freshwater habitat. At Grovetown Lagoon riparian vegetation is diverse and extensive, with the main components being crack willow (exotic), weeping willow (exotic), and raupo. Important lower-growing riparian species include tussock sedge, monkey musk rushes and watercress. Aquatic plants include low numbers of phytoplankton and blue-green algae, egeria, lagarosiphon, pondweeds and starwort. The native pondweed currently exists only in small remnant patches and is seen to be under threat from the presence of egeria. Egeria now forms the dominant submerged aquatic species covering most of the lagoon surface. The rare swamp nettle (Urtica linearfolia) is a threatened species existing in a small area at the lagoon. Also rare is the swamp buttercup. 9. Grovetown Lagoon themes Succession What is succession? When one group of plants gradually replaces another, it is called plant succession. A primary succession is when plants colonise bare ground that has never developed a soil – for instance sand dunes, volcanic ashes, exposed river gravels or glacial surfaces. 5 Secondary successions occur on soil that built up under earlier vegetation. They start after forest is cleared by an event like a landslide, fire or land cleared for farming. Native forests develop over several natural successions where each plant community improves the conditions for the next. Succession at Grovetown Lagoon At Grovetown Lagoon, we are assisting with secondary succession by planting along the edges of the lagoon, extending out to the road and river in some places. Primary succession may take place naturally, but in areas where there is competition for resources due to the presence of weeds, it is helpful for us to intervene to speed up the process. The planting areas are either grass/pasture, or covered with invasive plants such as willows, old man’s beard, broom, gorse etc. In both cases, the existing ground cover needs to be cleared before we can plant our trees. In the grassed areas, small patches of grass are sprayed or chipped away, to reduce competition for sun, water and space between the trees and the grass. In areas with invasive weeds, these need to be controlled for the same reason. Where willows have been poisoned and left standing, trees can be planted beneath these, as there is still sufficient light available. Light-demanding pioneer or primary species such as manuka, kanuka, red matipo, karamu, kohuhu and lemonwood will be some of the first to grow on bare ground. This shrubland is followed by secondary colonisers, which include mahoe, ribbonwood, lancewood and mapou. Later to establish are the taller emergent species like rimu, totara, pukatea, matai and kahikatea. Under these trees only the more shade tolerant canopy species such as five-finger, broadleaf, pokaka and pigeonwood can survive. Eventually, the colonising species are replaced by tree ferns, climbing and perching plants and a climax forest is reached. The cycle continues as trees fall through decay or wind, flood or fire. The soil composition changes as layers of decaying vegetation build up. Figure 2: An example of wetland vegetation Activities about succession WETMAK kit vegetation plot monitoring Plant a tree How is our forest growing? - Measure a tree 6 Competition What is competition? Competition is closely linked to succession, and is often the driving force behind succession. As the plants grow and conditions change, they compete for resources (light, water, nutrients, space), and the plants most suited to the conditions will survive. This, along with other mechanisms of change, eventually results in one forest type being replaced with another (succession). At Grovetown Lagoon, the main type of competition that we are concerned with is between invasive plants (weeds) and native plants (both ones that have been planted and ones that are naturally occurring). What’s wrong with weeds? Invasive plants are introduced plants that adversely affect the habitats they invade. They threaten the long-term survival of some native animals by changing or destroying their habitat, reducing the availability of food or breeding sites, or influencing the way native and introduced animals behave. There are now more introduced plant species growing wild in NZ than native plant species. Introduced plant species continue to naturalise at an alarming rate. The weed problem is one issue where all New Zealanders can help make a real difference. It is no accident that the weediest places are often those closest to towns. Over 70% of invasive weeds were originally garden plants. People continue to spread invasive weeds by growing them in their gardens, dumping rubbish from gardens or fish tanks, or accidentally spreading seeds and fragments. Invasive plants at Grovetown Lagoon At Grovetown Lagoon there are several species that are targeted during weed control operations; Old man’s beard, crack willow, grey willow, hawthorn, elderberry, ivy, periwinkle, blackberry, Japanese honeysuckle, and others. These species share certain characteristics that make them invasive: Fast growth rate Hardy – can tolerate a wide range of environmental conditions Have a climbing or smothering habit (old man’s beard, periwinkle, ivy, Japanese honeysuckle, blackberry) Produces large volume of seed and/or can reproduce vegetatively Short time to maturity Respond rapidly as resources become available Are perennial (survives for 3 or more years) as opposed to annual (surviving for only 1 year, and then relying on seeds to grow again the next year) Human intervention in plant competition If the lagoon and surrounding area was left untouched, some native plants may establish, but they would be vastly outnumbered by the faster growing and more widespread invasive species. In order to speed up the process and give the native plants a greater chance of success, the Grovetown Lagoon Trust has been taking sides in the competition – for natives and against weeds! Weed control at Grovetown, and most places where ecological restoration is done, involves the use of herbicides. Weeds are sprayed (leafy plants) or drilled and poisoned (invasive trees). Herbicides save a lot of time and effort when doing weed control, and mean that weeds can be eliminated from an area sooner than if herbicides were not used. 7 Activities about Competition Who’s winning? Plant competition at Grovetown Lagoon Changes in land use Because the formation of the lagoon was quite recent, the landuse of the surrounding area had already changed from its pre-human vegetation. Flax milling and farming had already had an impact, and continued to do so. With the building of stopbanks in 1900, the Lagoon was completely cut off from the Wairau River, and so reduced the previous regular flooding and sedimentation of the Lagoon from the river. Upgrades of the stopbanks in the 1990s have virtually eliminated flooding of the Lagoon. The present inflow of water into the Lagoon comes from springs, and run-off during heavy rain. Maori use of the area Historically some parts of the lagoon, adjoining wetland and waterways were considered a mahinga kai (food resource) by Rangitane and Ngati Rarua and were highly valued for the abundance of freshwater foods and resources such as inanga (whitebait), tuna (eel), patiki (brown teal), wata-kirihi (watercress). Eels were caught in abundance in the Lagoon until about 1960, when pollution and commercial eeling reduced numbers. Grovetown Lagoon surrounds what was once known as ‘Maori Island’, which was once part of the Wairau Pa, before the river cut through. The western boundary of the lagoon is considered wahi tapu (sacred) being the location of the main tribal Urupa (burial ground) in this region for Rangitane, Ngati Rarua and Ngati Toa Rangitira. This burial ground has been used for over 130 years. For this reason, parts of the Lagoon are not used for gathering kai, due to the proximity of the urupa on the island. Due to the swampy nature of the surrounding landscape this area was also well known for its harakeke (flax) and raupo. Harakeke was used in making clothing, mates, plates, baskets, ropes, snares, fishing lines and nets. Floats and rafts were made out of bundles of dried harakeke flower stalks, and nectar from flowers sweetened food and drinks. Flax sap cured boils and eased toothache. Leaves were used to bind bones, matted leaves as dressings and flax root juice as a disinfectant. Degradation and restoration The water of the Grovetown Lagoon has had serious pollution problems in the past. This has come from septic tank leakages, the piggery, cattle in nearby creeks and fertiliser runoff from nearby farms. Most of these problems have been eliminated, and although the water quality of the Lagoon is much higher, there is still room for improvement. Steps taken to improve the water quality and ecological values of the lagoon will result in a place where there will be improved habitat for fish and birds, and where people can fish and swim once again. This is a process that began 10 years ago with the formation of the Grovetown Lagoon Trust and will continue on for many more. Activities about Changes in Land Use Make a Grovetown Lagoon Management Plan Grovetown Lagoon Scavenger Hunt 8 10. Succession Activities WETMAK vegetation plot monitoring Equipment Monitoring sheets (see appendix) Pencils Clipboards Tape measure Plant ID books Camera Fluro marking tape Ziploc sample bags Permanent marker Gumboots (or old shoes) Aim To monitor the types and cover of the plants in the wetland – what species they are, whether they are native or introduced and what area they cover. This data will be collated for all groups that complete this activity, and used to show change over time. Introduction This activity is from the WETMAK (Wetland Monitoring and Assessment Kit) developed by the NZ Landcare Trust. This activity should be done in the wetland area just along the stopbank to the north. Gumboots will be required (or a willingness to get wet feet!). Three 5x5m plots will be marked out with stakes for you to split into groups and monitor. We can provide you with the most recent data that you can compare your results with. Please contact DOC on 03 5729100 or [email protected] before you go for this data. http://www.landcare.org.nz/wetmak Instructions Tie the tape to the top of the stakes, to mark the edges of the plot. Use the record sheets in the Appendix of this document – 1 per group. List the plants This information tells you what species are present, if there are more native or exotic species, if new species are establishing, or species are dying out in the plot over time. In the first column of the VEGETATION PLOT DATASHEET list all of the species you can identify. Write unique code names for those you can’t identify (see ‘Collect unknown plants’ below). Put a star ‘*’ next to those you know are exotic species. Don’t forget to look up! Include plants that have foliage hanging over the tapes into your plot. It can help to start with the tallest plants, then work your way down to the ground. Include plants that are dead if you can identify them, but note that they are dead in the comments box. List them on a separate line to the live ones. Don’t treat natural seasonal dieback of willow, raupo, etc as dead plants, monitor in summer to avoid this. Collect unknown plants For any species you can’t identify, collect a specimen, but only if there is plenty of plant matter in case it’s a rare species. For smaller plants collect an entire plant that has fruit/ flowers/ seeds, include roots. For trees take a small branch that has several leaves, not just one leaf, and include flowers/fruit. Take general and close up photographs and note details about its height, growth form, colour etc. Give the species a unique ‘code’ name, e.g. ‘redflowered herb’, and write this on the datasheet and the collection. Take it to a botanist as soon as you can, or press the sample for longer storage – don’t keep in a plastic bag for more than one day. 9 Add height data This information tells you what species are the tallest, if species are present as mature trees, shrubs and/or seedlings, if species are increasing in height over time (indicating growth/maturation). For each species, list the maximum height of the foliage – not flowering parts like flax stalks. Use a builders tape for plants up to about 2 m. For taller plants, have a person stand close to it with their arm up to indicate roughly 2 m, stand back and estimate how many ‘people’ high the plant is and double that number. Or you can mentally halve the height of the plant, estimate that height and double it. Estimate the average height for each species, to give an idea of how tall MOST of the vegetation of that species is. Tick which height tier each species occurs in – top is taller than 2 metres, mid is 30 cm to 2 m, ground is below 30 cm. Use a builders tape or 2 m pole with 30 cm marked in coloured tape or pen. Write ‘–’ if there is no foliage or green stems of that plant in a given tier – e.g. ignore a willow trunk in the bottom tier if all the leaves are above 30 cm, but tick ground if there are willow seedling or re-sprout leaves below 30 cm. If, say, the only flax is a leaf hanging into the plot you will tick mid, but not ground. Include plants visible under water, or floating on water, like duckweed. For floating plants their height will be ‘0’ but for upright plants currently partly under water their height will be height above the ground, not above the water. Estimate % cover This information tells you what species are the most dominant/abundant, if native or exotic species dominate, what species are increasing in amount, or disappearing over time. For each species, estimate how much of the plot it covers to the nearest of either <1%, 1%, 5%, or to the nearest 10% value. How much is 1m2? In a 5x5 it’s 50x50 cm. This is the hardest part of the module, use the following tips: • Focus on one species at a time – mentally blank out the rest. • Don’t add up overlapping foliage of the same species, even if it’s from a different plant – the total can never be >100% for a given species because it is the amount you would see looking down from above if all the other species disappeared. • If there are species that look very similar, estimate the total cover of the look-alikes, and then divide that value among them based on what you think is the relative amount of each. E.g. if Carex tussocks cover about 60%, and there seems to be two Carex secta to every Carex virgata, based on the few you could find in flower, then C. secta is 40% and C. virgata 20%. Make a note that it was hard to separate these and the values are best guess. • Deal with the less abundant species first, they will probably mostly cover 1 % or less, and it gets them off your conscience! • For those >1%, pretend you are hovering over the site looking down, how much of the plot does that plant cover. More than half (i.e. >50%)? Less than half? More than a quarter? Keep breaking the plot down this way to home in on the nearest 10%. • If the species forms a single dense clump it’s easier to guess cover. If not, try to mentally ‘pick up’ scattered plants and put them side by side in one part of the plot and estimate how much they would cover if clumped this way. • For scattered species you could estimate the actual cover of each patch/plant and add them up. Let’s say in your 10 x 10 m plot you have three flax plants. Each one is about 2 x 2 m, so 4 square metres. So together they cover 12 sq m. In a 10 x 10 m square there is a total of 100 sq m, so 12 sq m is 12%, you could round this down to 10%. • For species thinly scattered throughout the whole plot, like bindweed or spike sedge, look at a typical 1x1 m patch of it within the plot. Decide how much it fills. Imagine how much it would cover if you could gently bring it all together into a solid patch. If you think it would cover, say, half of this representative patch then its probably covering half of the whole plot, so write 50%. 10 • Ignore small foliage gaps in the canopy – this also includes subcanopy foliage. Include the amount of the plot covered by water and/or bare ground (exclude bare ground that is under water, it’s not bare!) Make notes This allows you to record any features of interest, such as dieback, seedlings, flowering or fruiting etc. Use the notes column to write anything of particular interest about a species, including if there are dead ones in the plot, and if there are seedlings of tree and shrub species – you’ll want to know if weeds are establishing or natives regenerating. Also if the plant is fruiting or flowering, particularly in planted areas or of weed species. Write general comments on the back page – whatever seems relevant, e.g. cattle recently been through, saw possum dung, etc. Check it Take a good look around your plot to make sure you haven’t forgotten any species. Make sure you have a tick or dash in top, mid, ground for every species, and that you’ve given each a maximum and average height. Total the natives Add up the total % cover for all the native species (ignore values you gave for dead plants and for water or bare ground). Then sum all of the live foliage (native and exotic). Divide the amount of total native cover by the amount of all live foliage and multiple by 100 to calculate the % of the plot that natives comprise. Collect in the tapes Carefully wind up your tapes, but leave the poles in place. Take photos of your datasheets. Please scan and email or email a photo of your completed table to [email protected] so the results can be collated over time. Discussion Compare your results with the results collected by previous classes. Are there any changes? Can you tell why this might be? Plant a tree Equipment Trees Spades Bamboo stakes Boots/sturdy shoes that can get dirty Aim To assist with the restoration of Grovetown Lagoon by planting native trees. These trees will eventually grow into a forest made up of species that would have originally grown in the area. Introduction Planting trees is a great way to connect with the earth and contribute something good on a long term scale. We are assisting with the natural process of succession, by giving the native trees a head start, rather than waiting for them to establish from seed dropped by birds. This activity also relates to competition, as we need to help the trees to establish by controlling weeds competing for the space in which we want the trees to grow. Instructions A representative from the Grovetown Lagoon Trust or DOC will be on site to assist with the planting, and give detailed instructions and a demonstration. Adult supervision is required, from a health and safety perspective, as well as making sure the trees are planted well. Avoid any competitions to see who can plant the most trees – it is better to have a competition to see who can plant their trees to the highest standard. 11 Discussion Remember where your trees are planted – come back and see them every year. Clear away the weeds from around them, see how they have grown. Discuss why planting a tree is a good thing, and why we prefer natives in areas like this. *put in some before and after planting photos* How is our forest growing? - Measure a tree Equipment Pencil and paper Tape measure Aim To measure 15 different trees at Grovetown Lagoon and record their height. The data will be collected from each group over the year, and charted to show the changes that occur. Introduction Tree height is one method of measuring growth. Growth rate can be influenced by many things – species, habitat quality (nutrients, sun, wind), pests and disease. At Grovetown Lagoon we have chosen 15 trees of 5 different species for students to measure. All the data is collected for each group and collated over time to show the growth patterns of different species, and with the species groups – different trees in different locations. We can provide you with the most recent data that you can compare your results with. Please contact DOC on the below address before you go for this data. Instructions Split into 5 groups. Each group is assigned a species, and measured the 3 trees of that species. Tree locations are shown on the attached map, and each tree is identified by a numbered stake in the ground. Each group measures their trees using either the tape measure, if the tree is under 3m tall, or the method outlined below. Results are recorded on the below table. Measure your trees to the nearest cm. Please scan and email a copy of your completed table to [email protected] so the results can be collated over time. DATE: Tree number/ location (GPS) 1 SCHOOL: Species Height Notes (any evidence of pest or disease damage, fruiting, etc) 2 3 4 5 6 7 12 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 Trees greater than 3m – measurement technique 1. Stand far enough from the tree so you can view the whole tree, top to bottom, without moving your head. For the most accurate measurement, stand so that you are on a piece of ground that is about level with the ground at the tree’s base. Your view of the tree should be as unobstructed as possible. 2. Have a friend stand near the base of the tree. 3. Hold a pencil or a small, straight stick (or ruler) in one hand and stretch your arm out so that the pencil is at arm’s length in front of you (between you and the tree). 4. Close one eye and adjust the pencil up or down so that you can sight the very top of the tree at the top of the pencil. This is easiest if you turn the pencil so that the sharpened point is pointing straight up. The tip of the pencil should just cover the top of the tree in your line of sight as you look at the tree “through” the pencil. 5. Move your thumb up or down the pencil so that the tip of your thumbnail is aligned with the tree’s base. While holding the pencil in position so that the tip is aligned with the tree’s top (as in step 4), move your thumb to the point on the pencil that covers the point (again, as you look “through” the pencil with one eye) where the tree meets the ground. 6. Rotate your arm so that the pencil is horizontal (parallel to the ground). Keep your arm held straight out, and make sure your thumbnail is still aligned with the tree’s base. 7. Have your friend move away from the tree (in the same direction you are pointing the pencil) until you can sight his or her feet “through” the point of your pencil. That is, your friend’s feet should be aligned with the pencil’s tip. Since, depending on the height of the tree, you may need to be some distance away from your friend, consider using hand signals (with the hand that is not holding the pencil) to tell him or her to go farther, come closer, or move to the left or right. 8. Measure the distance between your friend and the tree. Have your friend remain in the place or mark the spot with a stick or rock. Then use a measuring tape to measure the straight-line distance between that spot and the base of the tree. The distance between your friend and the tree is the height of the tree. If you don’t have a measuring tape you can pace out the distance, although this will not be as accurate (for kids two steps equal about one metre). 13 Discussion Compare your results with the results collected by previous classes. Have the trees grown since the last class was there? How much? What was the difference in growth rates between the different species? Why would one species grow faster than another? Was there a difference in growth rates between the 3 trees of the same species? Why might this be? Can you see if one tree is getting more light than another, or suffering from more competition than another? 11. Competition Activities Who’s winning? - competition at Grovetown Lagoon Equipment 1 soft ball 10 bandannas 20m of rope/string to mark the boundary Stopwatch/timer Aim To illustrate how weeds can take over a forest, and what happens if we intervene, or don’t. Three scenarios are played out, for 2 minutes each. Introduction Introduce this game by talking about what weeds are, and what the characteristics of weeds are. Why we don’t want them and how they can cause problems in our ecosystems. Also the effects they have on areas that we are trying to restore. How to play Lay the rope on the ground to mark out an area 5m x 5m – this is the habitat; bare ground that has been cleared by a flood or a slip. Mark a ‘start line (seed source)’ that is 5m away from the 5x5 square. Divide the class in half – weeds and native trees. One group wears bandannas. On the word ‘go’ one weed and one native tree walks to the habitat as fast as they can. Once there, they stand in one spot, rooted to the ground (like a plant). However, native trees can only take fairy steps (heel and toe touching) while weeds can take big steps. This reflects the fast growth rate of weeds compared to native trees. Once a plant is in place, the next plant from their team can leave the start line and head for the bare ground. The weeds have to try and out-compete the native trees – when they reach the habitat they join hands with another weed, beside a native tree. When a native tree has 3 weeds in a circle around it, it dies and goes back to the start. The weeds remain in the habitat. Trees can not move once they have taken root, but weeds can. Each new plant can only leave the start (seed source) when the plant before them (on their team) has ‘taken root’. Scenario 1: The round ends after 2 minutes (or until all the weeds have established) – count how many trees have taken root, and how many weeds. Discuss how we could help to give the natives a better chance. The students may be able to come up with some ideas, or may need some prompting. One option may be to do some weed control. Scenario 2: Play the game as above, but choose 1 person to be the Weedbuster – they have the ball. The Weedbuster throws the ball at the weeds (hitting below the knees), from outside the square. If a weed gets hit, it dies and goes back to the start. Another weed may 14 take its place as he/she arrives at the habitat. The Weedbuster can only throw the ball from outside the square, so if the ball lands inside the square, the weeds can kick it out and the conservationist has to retrieve it and continue. End the round after 2 minutes and count how many trees have taken root, and how many weeds. Discuss if this worked well. What else could we do to help the trees? How about a planting day? Scenario 3: The Weedbuster can now also help the native trees establish faster by tagging a tree (with his/her hand) when it is on its way to the habitat. Once tagged the tree is allowed to run to the habitat (simulating human help by planting trees, rather than waiting for seeds to establish naturally). The Weedbuster can still throw the ball at weeds to kill them. End the round after 2 minutes. Discussion Talk about the difference in what happens in a new habitat depending on how much we intervene. Talk about how we can control weeds/what the Weedbuster is doing when he/she is killing the weeds. Talk about how planting trees helps speed up the restoration process. 12. Changes in land use Activities Make a Grovetown Lagoon Management Plan Equipment Pencils and paper Aim Have your students come up with a management plan for Grovetown Lagoon, taking into account the needs and wants of various stakeholders. Introduction Explain the need for management plans in situations where many different people have an interest in a piece of land, and how these are created by discussion and consultation. *add in an aerial map of Grovetown Lagoon* Instructions Split your class into 5 groups – each group is a different stakeholder; - Local farmers - Conservationists - Iwi - Recreationalists - Duck shooters Each group has 10 minutes to figure out what their stakeholders are interested in, and how they want to see the Lagoon managed. They can be fed some ideas (below) or come up with their own ideas, depending on their age/ability. Local farmers – the land is good quality for vineyards and also dairy farming. It would be great to cut down all the vegetation surrounding the lagoon, build more stopbanks and use the water for irrigation. Conservationists – the Lagoon is a precious area of wetland. We need to conserve what remains and make it bigger and better. Plant more trees, stop hunting, shooting and fishing, control all the weeds, and try to create a buffer between the Lagoon and the farms so they can’t pollute the water. Iwi – the land in the centre of the Lagoon has special value because of the urupa (burial ground). We don’t want this to be disturbed in any way. We want to be able to harvest kai from the Lagoon and therefore the water quality needs to be improved. 15 Recreationalists – we want to be able to walk and bike around the Lagoon on well-maintained tracks. We also want to be able to kayak on the Lagoon. Some trees will need to be cut down and the weed removed from the water. We want to walk our dogs there too. Duck shooters – we want to be able to hunt ducks and build maimai that can remain in place. We should feed the ducks and build up the populations. We don’t want people walking and getting in the way during duck shooting season. We should plant oak trees and other exotic plants to attract more ducks. Each group then presents their stakeholder group’s views to the rest of the class, and takes notes. They then get into 5 new groups, with one person from each stakeholder group in each group. Each group then comes up with a brief plan for the management of the Lagoon that incorporates all the views of the stakeholders, as much as possible. These are shared with the class. Discussion Discuss the Management Plans that were created and how they differed. Were everyone’s views taken into account? Is it possible to please everyone? Would anything be done differently if you had a limited budget? Grovetown Lagoon Scavenger Hunt Name_________________________________ Date ______________ Can you find… …a work in progress- would like to include info from the panels as well as things from nature (without removing living things) 13. APPENDIX Plant identification basics Leaf Margins Examine the edges or margins of leaves some leaves have teeth (serrated) along their margins, some leaves are lobed and some leaf margins are smooth. Textures Some leaves are completely hairy, others have hairs on only one side, and others are completely smooth. Leaves may also be thick or thin, rough or smooth. Simple and compound Strictly speaking, leaves are either simple (not divided into leaflets) or compound (made up of a number of individual leaflets). Although simple leaves and leaflets can look alike, leaves can be distinguished by the presence of a leaf bud in the angle between the leaf stalk and the stem; a leaflet never has a bud here. Leaf arrangements Many trees have alternate leaves that are staggered along the twig. Other trees have opposite leaves that grow in pairs along the twig and some are whorled, where there are 3 or more attached to the stem. Leaflets can be arrange in a palmate (hand shaped) or a pinnate (feather-like with 2 rows of leaflets) fashion. Bark basics Many people can identify trees just by looking at the colour and texture of tree bark. For instance, bark may be shaggy, smooth, or rough; it may have deep furrows or markings. Eucalyptus is an example of a tree easily identified by its brown, paper-like bark that comes off in long strips. However, when using bark to identify a tree, it is best to look at bark growing on the trunk rather than on branches and twigs (because the bark on a branch is 16 thinner and newer, it may look quite different from the trunk). Bark also looks different as a tree gets older. Related activities Sound map Equipment 1 piece of paper each Pen/pencil Aim To focus attention and notice all the sounds in the Grovetown Area. Instructions Mark an x in the middle of your piece of paper – this is where you are, in the centre of your map. When you hear a sound, make a mark on the card that aptly describes the sound. The mark's location should indicate as accurately as possible the direction and distance of the sound. The marks should be interpretive, not literal; the players don't have to draw pictures of plants and animals, just a few lines indicating wind, or a musical note indicating a songbird. In other words, they should spend little time drawing and most of the time listening. Tell the players to keep their eyes closed while they listen. Explain that cupping their hands behind their ears provides a reflective surface for catching sounds. To hear sounds behind them, they needn't turn their heads, but just cup their hands in front of their ears. Each student should find a listening spot away from other people, and stay there for the duration of the activity. How long you should play depends on the group's age, attention span, and how well-supplied the environment is with sounds. A good basic guideline is 10 minutes for adults, 5-10 minutes for children. As the players assemble, ask them to share their maps with a partner. After the children have drawn their maps and shared them, you can ask questions such as: How many different sounds did you hear? Which sounds did you like best? Why? Which sounds did you like least? Why? Which sounds had you never heard before? Do you know what made the sounds? Leaf rubbing Equipment • White paper • Hard/smooth surface to write on • Dark coloured crayons. • Tree identification book/flip guide. Aim Use leaf rubbings to create your own tree identification book. 17 Instructions 1. Collect leaves (there are plenty on the ground, no need to pick them off trees), identify which tree the leaf came from. 2. Find a comfortable spot for the group to sit and work. 3. Put a leaf upside down smooth surface, then cover with a plain piece of paper. 4. While holding the paper and leaf in place, use the side of a crayon to rub across the leaf. A dark crayon will produce a clearer print of the leaf. 5. Make sure that you colour over the entire leaf. Rubbing firmly all over the leaf will show the veins and the outline of the leaf 6. When finished, have them flip the leaf over and do a rubbing of the other side of the leaf. 7. After the craft is complete, have the kids label the leaves back at school. You can punch holes in their pages and use yarn to make them a leaf identification album. Activities from the Tiro Oneone (Living Landscape )Kit This kit is available from the Marlborough District Council and the Department of Conservation, and contains a range of activities based around Marlborough Landscapes. 18 Vegetation Plot Datasheet (pg1) SITE NAME: Grovetown Lagoon Wetland PLOT SIZE: LOCATION: Grovetown Lagoon, Marlborough RECORDER: Species (* for exotics) 5 x 5 meters DATE: Height (m) Max Avg Presence tick or Top >2 m Mid 0.3-2 % Cover Notes3 (e.g.dieback, #seedlings of trees/scrubs) Gnd <30 cm 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 WATER BAREGROUND A. SUM OF % COVER FOR ALL NATIVE SPECIES Exclude dead %cover B. SUM OF % COVER FOR ALL PLANTS (LIVE ONLY) Exclude dead %cover A/B*100 (IE % OF TOTAL THAT IS NATIVE VEGETATION) Exclude dead %cover REMINDER: Include overhanging vegetation. Height is for foliage, not flower stalks. 19 Vegetation Plot Datasheet (pg2) SITE NAME: Species (* for exotics) DATE: Height (m) Max Avg Presence tick or Top Mid Gnd >2 m 0.3-2 <30 cm % Cover Notes3 (e.g.dieback, #seedlings of trees/scrubs) 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 A. SUM OF % COVER FOR ALL NATIVE SPECIES ONLY B. SUM OF % COVER FOR ALL PLANTS (exc. water/ground) A/B*100 (IE % OF TOTAL THAT IS NATIVE VEGETATION) GENERAL COMMENTS: 20