logo
Advisory group exploring how to control Wellington's millipede infestation

Advisory group exploring how to control Wellington's millipede infestation

RNZ News21-05-2025

Millipedes.
Photo:
RNZ/Mary Argue
Work to explore how to control an
infestation of millipedes
in Wellington is set to begin, with an expert advisory group due to meet on Thursday.
Residents in the capital's southern suburbs have said they're dealing with an explosion of Portuguese millipedes in their streets and houses in autumn.
In recent years locals have described waking to find hundreds of scaly black millipedes around their homes, discovering them in shoes, bags and even their beds.
At the entrance to Red Rocks on Wednesday there were dozens of dead millipedes on the ground around Te Kopahou information centre, with a few live ones crawling around.
A nearby resident confirmed the creature's numbers had dwindled to only "a handful around the area that would normally have dozens".
Advisory group member entomology professor Phil Lester said the millipedes are most apparent in autumn, when the adults emerge from the soil.
They are not visible at other times of the year as they are typically in the soil eating decaying plant material.
The outbreak prompted Wellington city councillor Nureddin Abdurahman to demand an urgent meeting to discuss how the district and regional councils could better monitor and contain the millipedes.
The Ministry for Primary Industries said because control options were limited, a Technical Advisory Group - including representatives from the Department of Conservation and regional and city councils - had been set up to investigate possible solutions.
If you've been affected by the millipedes contact
Mary.Argue@rnz.co.nz
Portuguese millipedes.
Photo:
Supplied
According to the group's entomologist and an independent specialist in insect biological control, those solutions could include a tiny parasitic worm that kills the millipede from the inside out - like a "horror show".
Managing director of Bioforce Christopher Thompson said his company specialised in controlling insect species using other insects, mites and microbes.
He said the nematode
Steinernema feltia,
which is naturally present in New Zealand soil, could be an effective biocontrol agent against the Portuguese millipede when deployed in numbers.
"Once they've wiggled their way in through some holes and gaps in [the insects'] body, they're able to start reproducing.
"Eventually they'll get so numerous in there they'll explode out of the host - not something you want to watch just before having dinner."
Thompson said a millipede host could hold tens, or even hundreds, of thousands of nematodes before it burst.
"It is a bit of a horror show to be fair, but it's nature."
He said insects were a particular target of the worm, so it was possible that if used against the millipede population in Wellington, it would jump to other species in the garden - although he believed the weta would be fairly safe.
Larger life forms - such as humans, frogs, skinks, and birds - were unsuitable hosts, he said.
Thompson said pitting the worm against the millipedes was as simple as ordering the parasite in the post, mixing it with water in a watering can, and pouring it around the property.
He said any control efforts would be better sooner rather than later before the "you problem" became a nation-wide problem.
Entomology professor Phil Lester.
Photo:
Advisory Group member entomology professor Phil Lester agreed, telling RNZ it would be great if the millipede population plaguing south coast residents could be nipped in the bud.
He said the millipedes was already widespread in Australia and had been in New Zealand for about 20 years.
"So, it seems like they would love the New Zealand climate quite a lot and would have the ability to spread widely if we didn't get on top of it now."
Lester said the goal of the Technical Advisory Group was to investigate control tools for problematic pest species, including what could be done by the public.
He suspected Thursday's meeting would be the first of many and would set the scene for current control options, as well as sparking further research into other methods.
Lester said an Australian nematode species had proven to be an effective biological control against the millipedes and it would be great if something similar could be done for Wellingtonians.
"If we can encourage that... that would be awesome [and] alleviate some stress for many of the residents."
Biosecurity New Zealand manager of pest management Dr Cath Duthie said the Portuguese millipede was first detected at Seaview, Lower Hutt, in 2021 but it was apparent it had been in the region for at least two decades.
She said it was primarily a "nuisance pest" where it had been introduced.
"As management options are limited, a Technical Advisory Group has been formed... to explore potential control solutions for the species and recommend other control methods for existing identified populations."
Duthie said in the meantime, the regional council had information about management options for the Portuguese millipede on its website.
Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero
,
a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

New Lynn stabbing attack: Supermarket visits 'insurmountable obstacle', inquest told
New Lynn stabbing attack: Supermarket visits 'insurmountable obstacle', inquest told

RNZ News

timean hour ago

  • RNZ News

New Lynn stabbing attack: Supermarket visits 'insurmountable obstacle', inquest told

Ahamed Samsudeen coming out of the New Lynn train station, on the day of the attack on September 3, 2021. Photo: Supplied Content warning: This report contains content some may consider disturbing. The inquest into the LynnMall terror attack will see further analysis of video showing how the assault unfolded, when it resumes on Thursday. Ahamed Samsudeen stabbed five people and injured two others at a Woolworths supermarket in Auckland's New Lynn, before he was shot and killed by police. Survivors at the inquest on Wednesday watched a video of Ahamed Samsudeen pausing to put on a red glove inside the supermarket . He was then seen ripping a knife from its packaging and rushing at his first victim. What happened next scarred survivors physically and emotionally. One survivor, who had name suppression, told the inquest just how much of an impact the attack had on her. "For some, the mere thought of entering a supermarket has become an insurmountable obstacle," she said. "We are no longer the individuals we used to be, and coming to terms with this reality is profoundly difficult." Samsudeen's rampage ended after he was shot 12 times by police. He had been granted refugee status in 2013, was identified by the SIS as a terrorist threat in early 2017, and was under surveillance at the time of the attack on 3 September, 2021. Detective Senior Sergeant Jason McIntosh told the inquest about the moment authorities noticed a change in his social media posting. "Recent content continues to reference Jannah, in brackets 'afterlife', and death, he's referenced literature on lone wolf terrorism" McIntosh said. "Samsudeen has begun to increasingly include his own commentary when posting, which may assist with understanding his mindset going forward." The inquest was shown footage of Samsudeen's previous trip to the supermarket - roughly a month before the attack. He could be seen walking to the knives aisle, appearing to take special notice of the items on the shelves. McIntosh was questioned by police counsel Alysha McClintock over Samsudeen's movements in the time leading up to the attack, as recorded in surveillance logs. "Once it was understood that Mr Samsudeen had visited the New Lynn Countdown previously on the 12th of August, the footage we've just seen, was there subsequently by one of your colleagues, an endeavour to go through the surveillance logs and look at the locations that might have had knifes and or other weapons that Mr Samsudeen had visited," McClintock asked. "Correct, yes" McIntosh replied. The logs revealed Samsudeen made about 119 visits to more than 60 different locations that could have had knives or other weapons. The lawyer representing the interests of Samsudeen's family, Fletcher Pilditch, asked McIntosh about the police surveillance of Samsudeen. "Was it the observations that had been made and recorded by the surveillance team that enabled you after the 3rd of September to then go and identify other places where he had been? "And I don't need to pry into where that information came from, I was just interested in the source of it," Pilditch said. "I do know that we compiled a list post investigation," McIntosh responded. The inquest was expected on Thursday to go through a frame-by-frame analysis of CCTV footage from the attack, as well as hearing technical evidence later in the day.

Wellington emploment market 'pretty Hunger Games', jobseeker says
Wellington emploment market 'pretty Hunger Games', jobseeker says

RNZ News

timean hour ago

  • RNZ News

Wellington emploment market 'pretty Hunger Games', jobseeker says

Photo: 123RF After about a year of job hunting in Wellington, communications experts Rebecca Thomson and Emily Turner have seen a lot. Sometimes they apply for a job and get no response. Other times, the job remains advertised while interviews are happening. In one case, applying for a three-month contract was to involve a full 45-minute interview, then a coffee chat - but then the advertiser decided not to fill the position. "It feels pretty Hunger Games out there, sort of far more people than jobs, across the board," Thomson said. "It can be like a really bad dating situation," Turner said. "It's like permanently being ghosted from a very bad date, or not even a date because that would be the interview … it's putting your best foot forward, doing some really good chat and banter and thinking it's all going really well, and then nothing." Turner said she had about six interviews for roles, from about 20 applications. "I've got a very clear approach of what I'm applying for, I don't do a sort of scatter gun approach, I apply for roles that I know I've got a clear go at getting." She said she had asked recruiters how many people were applying for senior communications roles and had been told that it could be 80 to 100. Thomson said she had picked up freelance work along the way. "But in terms of full-time employment it's been a year. We're both highly skilled people that have worked on an array of projects and we're not the only ones." The pair have started an informal network for Wellington job hunters, where people can get together to support each other and share tips and information about the employment market. "We set it up to get to be somewhere where people can meet and have a chat in a casual, friendly environment," Thomson said. "It's tough out there and people are mentally finding it tough ." Some people want advice on how to put mortgage payments on hold, how to cover the cost of car registration or body corporate fees without regular income, but other times the network might share details of jobs that might suit other people. Thomson said from the initial meeting with two of them, their next meeting attracted eight. Another meeting was planned for this week and more people were offering their support online. "I've had a few DMs (direct messages) from people saying 'I can't come but this is great'," Thomson said. Gareth Kiernan, chief forecaster at Infometrics, said it was unlikely the Wellington employment market would turn around soon . "There's certainly not any signs that any time soon the pressure from government is going to change on either employment numbers or departmental spending. "Often what we've seen in the past, if we went back to the previous National government from 2008 onwards they had a sinking lid on employment, it was not as tough but reasonably tough, but at the same time they had a bit more room fiscally so there was more consulting work going on. This time the pressure is very much on both sides." Infometrics chief forecaster Gareth Kiernan. Photo: Supplied He said the public sector crackdown was having a flow-on effect on the private sector in Wellington. "It may be after 18 months we're through the worst of it but it's hard to see it turning around and employment picking up any time soon." The annual average unemployment rate in Wellington City was 4.8 percent in the year to March, up from 3.4 percent in the previous 12 months. Kiernan said Wellington had previously had unemployment well below the national average but the gap had closed. Jarrod Kerr, chief economist at Kiwibank, said he thought it could be six months before the Wellington situation improved, "but probably more like a year". "It's the harsh reality of an RBNZ(Reserve Bank)-induced recession and significant cuts in the public sector. We forecast an improvement, which keeps getting delayed, by the end of the year, and we look into 2026 with more confidence." Thomson said anyone who wanted to join the network could find them on LinkedIn. "We wanted to keep it sort of friendly and open - people don't have to join some page to be part of it … it's a space to decompress and have a coffee or tea and chat with some like-minded people." Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

More than half of voters back proposed penalty for Te Pāti Māori MPs, poll suggests
More than half of voters back proposed penalty for Te Pāti Māori MPs, poll suggests

RNZ News

timean hour ago

  • RNZ News

More than half of voters back proposed penalty for Te Pāti Māori MPs, poll suggests

Te Pāti Māori MP Hana-Rawhiti Maipa-Clarke at Parliament, after the first reading of the Treaty Principles Bill in November. Photo: RNZ/ Samuel Rillstone More than half of voters consider the proposed penalty for three Te Pāti Māori MPs over the Treaty Principles haka to be either appropriate or too lenient, polling shows, ahead of the debate on the matter resuming on Thursday afternoon. That debate - which had potential to become a filibuster - was cut short when Leader of the House Chris Bishop unexpectedly postponed it last month. The Privileges Committee - which recommends punishments for breaking Parliament's rules - proposed a 21-day suspension for the co-leaders Rawiri Waititi and Debbie Ngarewa-Packer, and seven days for MP Hana-Rawhiti Maipi-Clarke. It means no pay, no ability to vote on legislation, and no presence in Parliament for the duration. The latest RNZ-Reid Research poll asked for voters' views on whether the punishment fit the crime. Overall, more people - 37.0 percent said it was "about right"; while 36.2 percent said it was "too harsh"; 17.2 percent said "too lenient", and 9.6 percent said they did not know: a 54.2 percent majority then backing the punishment or thought it should be stronger, in line with the coalition parties' view. The result puts opposition parties - which all labelled the three-week ban disproportionate - in a difficult position. Broken down by voting preferences, more than half of Labour's supporters (51.2 percent) backed leader Chris Hipkins' view the suspensions were too harsh, but a sizeable number thought the punishment fair (29.8 percent) or too lax (8 percent). Greens supporters were more convinced with three quarters (75.3 percent) calling the punishment too harsh, but still 12.4 percent said it was about right and 3.8 percent too lenient. Surprisingly, 9 percent of Te Pāti Māori's supporters also labelled it too lenient, although a clear 80.8 percent called it too harsh, with just 6.2 percent saying it was about right. The results for the coaltion voters were more predictable, far more National, ACT and NZ First supporters saying it was too lenient, compared to those calling it too harsh. But Speaker Gerry Brownlee, of the National Party, appears to be in the latter camp - he called the punishments "very severe" and "unprecedented" when setting down the original debate on Parliament's calendar. He pointed out no MP found guilty of contempt had previously been suspended for more than three days. The Privileges Committee recommendation was also only backed by coalition parties, despite convention dictating the MPs on the committee should aim for consensus. Those responding to RNZ's questions may have known these facts from media reporting - or they may not. Bishop's postponement of the debate took the teeth out of opposition criticisms the government wanted to keep the punished MPs from commenting on the Budget - as it turned out, the co-leaders did not speak in the Budget debate anyway. Budget delivered, MPs return to the debating chamber to discuss the punishment after Question Time today. The length of the debate rests ultimately in Brownlee's hands, and he has signalled a willingness to let it continue until all views were thoroughly aired. Whether parties actually want to filibuster - given the poll, and the risk of voters' patience for politicians talking about themselves wearing thin - is far from certain. Hipkins says a few of his MPs will speak, but they will not be running down the clock with endless speeches. The Greens' co-leaders have said they think the MPs should not be suspended, and they plan to scrutinise the decision "to the highest degree". But Te Pāti Māori is eager to put the matter to bed. "Just got to hurry up and get it over and done with and let's sort it out, otherwise we'll be hanging around here waiting and waiting and waiting. Just, they've made their verdict - let's just get it done," co-leader Rawiri Waititi said. This poll of 1008 people was conducted by Reid Research, using quota sampling and weighting to ensure a representative cross section by age, gender and geography. The poll was conducted through online interviews between 23-30 May 2025 and has a maximum margin of error of +/- 3.1 percent at a 95 percent confidence level. The report is available here .

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store