Where’s wallaby? Drone sweeps Long Bay Regional Park in sear…

Skippy, where the bloody hell are ya?

Not at Auckland’s Long Bay Regional Park, apparently.

A suspected wallaby has kept Auckland Council busy since a park volunteer claimed to have spotted it in April.

But trail cameras and a wallaby detector dog named Lotte have been unsuccessful in detecting the wallaby, while scat samples collected for analysis ended up belonging to a possum.

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A park volunteer claimed to have seen a wallaby at Long Bay Regional Park in April.

Jason Dorday/Stuff

A park volunteer claimed to have seen a wallaby at Long Bay Regional Park in April.

As night fell over the North Shore park on Wednesday, a team of forest survey specialists took to the sky with a thermal and night vision drone, in a final attempt to prove or rule out the wallaby’s existence entirely.

Wallabies were brought into New Zealand around the late 1800s, for game hunting and their valuable skins. However, they are now considered a “major pest”, Auckland Council head of natural environment delivery Phil Brown said.

While there has been no physical evidence of a wallaby found at the park, it was important to thoroughly investigate the sighting, as wallabies can cause a lot of damage to farms, the environment and forest ecosystems.

Auckland Council has spent $24,500 following up on reported wallaby sightings in the region since 2015. (File photo of a wallaby in the South Island)

DOUG FIELD/Stuff

Auckland Council has spent $24,500 following up on reported wallaby sightings in the region since 2015. (File photo of a wallaby in the South Island)

“We really don’t want them establishing in Auckland,” Brown said.

Known wallaby populations in the Bay of Plenty, Waikato and South Canterbury areas and Kawau Island in the Hauraki Gulf are the subject of significant pest eradication efforts, as without intervention it is feared they could spread across a third of New Zealand over the next 50 years.

This could prove devastating for New Zealand’s wildlife, as demonstrated by the situation on Kawau Island. Governor Sir George Grey purchased Kawau Island in 1862 and introduced a variety of exotic plants and animals, however many species did not survive due to the herbivore wallabies destroying the vegetation.

Auckland Council head of natural environment delivery Phil Brown says wallabies are a major pest that could inflict a lot of damage if they became established in Auckland.

Chris McKeen/Stuff

Auckland Council head of natural environment delivery Phil Brown says wallabies are a major pest that could inflict a lot of damage if they became established in Auckland.

According to the Department of Conservation, the presence of wallabies could be detrimental to the island’s kiwi and North Island weka populations, as they strip the ground of leaves and thus reduce the amount of worms and insects for the birds to feed on.

After five hours of searching around 160 hectares, Interpine Innovation director David Herries said he was confident there was no wallaby living at Long Bay Regional Park.

The search was conducted with a thermal camera, which detects heat to indicate the presence of an animal. The drone is then paused while a night-vision camera identifies the animal.

Interpine Innovation general manager and director David Herries is confident there is no wallaby at Long Bay Regional Park.

Interpine Innovation/Supplied

Interpine Innovation general manager and director David Herries is confident there is no wallaby at Long Bay Regional Park.

“That allows us to actually zoom right in and literally see the bunny’s ears tweaking around and hopping, or a hedgehog crawling.

“It’s always a challenge to find that one particular animal out there, across a wide area. We weren’t lucky enough to find a wallaby in the regional park.”

However, the team did manage to spot a range of birds and ducks, and pests such as hedgehogs, rabbits and possums.

The drone’s thermal camera first detects heat, indicating the presence of an animal. The black dot in the centre is a possum, the dots in the top left are cows.

Interpine Innovation/Supplied

The drone’s thermal camera first detects heat, indicating the presence of an animal. The black dot in the centre is a possum, the dots in the top left are cows.

The news that no wallaby was found will come as a relief to some locals, who did not want to see it shot and killed, which Brown previously indicated would be the likely outcome.

Herries said that from a pest management perspective, it was “fantastic” Auckland did not have any wallabies.

There have been seven possible wallaby sightings reported to Auckland Council since 2015, including at Wenderholm Regional Park, Pohuehue, Long Bay Regional Park and Waiwera – all in north Auckland – and one at Tapapakanga Regional Park in south-east Auckland.

After the heat is detected, a night vision camera zooms into to identify what animal it belongs to. Here’s the possum close up.

Interpine Innovation/Supplied

After the heat is detected, a night vision camera zooms into to identify what animal it belongs to. Here’s the possum close up.

None of those reports resulted in a wallaby being found, but it cost Auckland Council a total of $12,700​ to be sure, including $4000 for Wednesday’s drone survey.

Additionally, given the proximity of the north Auckland sightings, the council ordered a large-scale helicopter survey of a 9000-hectare area of likely wallaby habitat between north Ōrewa, Warkworth and Pūhoi in June 2021, at a cost of $11,800. No wallabies were detected.

As for the Long Bay wallaby – or not-wallaby, as we now know – Brown said it was likely Auckland Council would end its investigation.

This wallaby was spotted during an earlier drone survey in the Bay of Plenty.

Interpine Innovation/Supplied

This wallaby was spotted during an earlier drone survey in the Bay of Plenty.

“Because we didn’t manage to find any wallabies on our survey, we think the investigation will be wrapped up now. We’ll obviously just keep an ear out and an eye out for any more sightings.”

It was possible the April sighting, which Brown said “certainly sounded credible”, may have been a large rabbit or hare.

“There are other animals that look similar to a wallaby, particularly if you only get a fleeting glimpse.

“It’s also possible that it was a wallaby, and that’s why we always have to go and have a good check. It was really important that we stop a new pest inflicting more damage on Auckland.”

Anyone who sees a wallaby in Auckland is asked to report it to Auckland Council by emailing [email protected].

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