Cull-Tivation Pest Management

Cull-Tivation Pest Management My name is David and I am the owner of Cull-Tivation Pest Management.

A new company striving to assist those that have pests on their land from farmers, companies, golf courses and more.

30/08/2025

Here at Cull-Tivation Pest Management we strive to keep up to date with the training, safety and practises for keeping our lands safe. If you wish to help us to allow our staff to ensure they use the best equipment, and to ensure that the job is done to the best of our ability please consider donating to the cause, to allow us to continue to grow and evolve.

You can contact us here if you wish to donate and can remain anonymous or if you are ok to receive a shout out. Anyone that wishes to receive a shout out will have their name recorded and at a later date will go into the draw to win some pretty awesome prizes.

We are hoping this will allow us to share our page across this beautiful country that is the land of the long white cloud and get those that can use our services in touch with us, but more importantly allow us to share our vision of reducing and hopefully eliminating those pest species from the land to prolong the future of this magnificent country.

Wild goats: Goats were introduced to New Zealand in the early days of European settlement for food, to establish a comme...
30/08/2025

Wild goats:

Goats were introduced to New Zealand in the early days of European settlement for food, to establish a commercial fibre industry, and for w**d control on developing land. The descendants of those that escaped or were deliberately released thrived in the country’s grass hills, forest and scrubland areas.

Today wild goats (Capra hircus) occur on both main islands and a few offshore islands. Wild goats are classifed as wild animals under the Wild Animal Control Act 1977.

Facts

Description

Colour wise, they can be white, brown or black, or any combination of these. In New Zealand both s*xes have horns. All males and some females are bearded as adults. Males are the largest s*x, with clearly heavier forequarters, shaggier coats and larger horns.

Where are they found?

Wild goats are found in a wide range of habitats. They range from sea level to the alpine zone, living in introduced and native grasslands, scrub and forest.

Because they are browsers, their preferred habitat is forest or scrub-covered upland containing areas of grassland. They are agile on steep crags and narrow ledges and can get to areas that deer cannot reach. They like sunny sides of slopes, making use of open places close to the shelter of forest or scrub.

Why are they here?

Goats arrived here as early as 1773, when Captain James Cook released them ashore in the Marlborough Sounds during his second voyage to New Zealand. Early explorers, whalers, sealers and settlers bought goats with them for food, and used them to barter with Māori.

During the late nineteenth - early twentieth century, goats were released onto outlying islands to provide a food source for castaways. Angora goats were introduced about the same time to develop an industry for their fine wool, which never really took off.

As land around the country was ‘developed’, w**ds such as gorse, blackberry and briar invaded, and goats were brought in to eat the w**ds.

Wild goats now occupy about 14% of New Zealand - about half of this on public conservation land. Total population size is unknown but is estimated to be several hundred thousand.

The threat

New Zealand’s native plants are particularly vulnerable to damage from browsing. Herding browsers such as goats cause two-fold damage by eating native plants and by trampling large areas of vegetation and compactable soils.

Goats will eat the foliage of most trees and plants and quickly destroy all vegetation within their reach, eating seedlings, saplings and litter-fall off the forest floor. They do however have strong preferences and will eat out favoured species first such as broadleaf/pāpāuma (Griselinia littoralis) and māhoe (Melicytus ramiflorus) before moving on to less desirable plants. Goats will also strip bark off trees and by eating young seedlings they effectively put a stop to forest regeneration. This takes vital food and shelter from native animals, and can worsen the effects of climate change.

Photo and information taken from Department of Conservation: https://www.doc.govt.nz/nature/pests-and-threats/animal-pests-and-threats/wild-goats/

Ferrets: Ferrets are small predators and are members of the mustelid family, along with stoats, weasels, badgers, mink a...
30/08/2025

Ferrets:

Ferrets are small predators and are members of the mustelid family, along with stoats, weasels, badgers, mink and otters.

Stoats, weasels and ferrets, the only mustelids present in New Zealand, pose a serious threat to our threatened wildlife.

Since 2002, the sale, distribution and breeding of ferrets as domestic pets has been banned in New Zealand.

History of ferrets in New Zealand

Ferrets were introduced to New Zealand from Europe in the 1880s, along with stoats and weasels, to control rabbits that were breeding out of control. By 1900, ferrets were well established in the wild and definitely played a role in the decline of native birds like the kiwi, weka and blue duck, and the extinction of kākāpō on the mainland.

In the 1980s, at least 17 ferret farms were established in Northland. When these closed down due to a downturn in the market, many ferrets escaped or were set free, contributing to the expansion of ferrets northwards into some of New Zealand's remaining prime kiwi habitat.

Physical description

The ferret is the largest mustelid in New Zealand, with a body length of 320 mm-460 mm and a tail of 110-180 mm.

Males are noticeably larger than females, averaging 1.1-1.3 kg (max 1.85 kg) with females ranging from 400-1,100 grams. Ferrets are considerably larger and of ‘stockier’ build than stoats.

The colour is variable, with a typical white or cream undercoat and a variable quantity of longer dark guard hairs, giving some animals a black looking appearance while others appear almost white.

The tail is uniformly dark. A variable dark mask occurs across the eyes and above the nose.

Prey

The main food of ferrets is rabbits and hares. Densities of ferrets seem to be strongly correlated with density of rabbits. A sudden reduction in rabbit numbers, as with the introduction of RCD/RHD but also with natural fluctuations, means that hungry ferrets attack other animals like threatened native species.

Rodents, possums and ground-dwelling or nesting birds are all frequently taken. Lizards, eels, frogs, insects, eggs, hedgehogs and carrion are minor prey items.

Behaviour

They are mainly nocturnal, with a home range that is variable according to food supply, from 3-70 ha. A ferret will usually exclude others of the same s*x from its central home range. Scent glands are used extensively to leave territorial scent markers.

Mating of ferrets usually occurs in September. The litter, usually of 4-8 (up to 12), is born in October or November, with young independent by late January. Females can have a second litter after this if food is abundant.

There is high mortality in the first year, and an average lifespan in the wild may be 4-5 years.

Ferrets are generally absent or in low numbers in areas of high rainfall, where there are few rabbits, or deep within forested areas.

Ferrets will often revisit the site of a kill.

Impact on native species

While ferrets have been in New Zealand for over a century, they are still having huge impacts on vulnerable native species. No equilibrium with the environment has been reached - native species are still declining because of ferrets.

It was originally thought that ferrets were limited to open country like pasture, scrubland and coastal areas, and in the fringes of nearby forests; however, research has found ferrets within some Northland forests placing added pressure on already threatened kiwi populations. The decline of kiwi in Northland has been greatest in the south, which is the area where ferrets are most prevalent.

One of the biggest challenges is to maintain ferret-free islands and areas like Stewart Island and Great Barrier Island and reserves that are home to threatened species. The arrival of ferrets in places like these would be lethal for flightless and ground-dwelling birds.

Ferrets are not as widespread as stoats. However, ferrets have a significant effect on many riverbed breeding birds eg. black stilt, dotterel species and pied oystercatcher.

Ferrets are known to prey on royal albatross chicks, yellow-eyed penguin and little penguin, weka , North Island kiwi , and numerous freshwater wetland birds (eg. ducks).

They are considered as one of the major causes of decline of the white-flippered penguin, and as a significant and probable main cause (along with cats) of massive range contractions of grand and Otago skinks.

Ground-nesting birds like the rare New Zealand dotterel and extremely rare black stilt, flightless birds like the kiwi, rare lizards and insects are eaten by ferrets. Even the yellow-eyed penguin, blue penguin and royal albatross are not safe from ferrets. Ferrets love eggs and attack and kill chicks and adult birds - even adult kiwi. Threatened giant weta make a tasty snack, and geckos and skinks are not immune from the dangers ferrets pose.

Species found in the same areas as rabbits are more at risk than others. For example, the black stilt in the rabbit-prone Mackenzie Basin and the New Zealand dotterel on the Coromandel's coastal dunes. However, kiwi are particularly at risk where they share their forest home with ferrets that specialise on rats and mice rather than rabbits. These ferrets are more likely to supplement their rodent diet with kiwi.

Ferrets even threaten New Zealand's farming industry as they can carry bovine tuberculosis (Tb), as possums do. In some possum-free areas, ferrets have tested positive for Tb.

Photo and information taken from Department of Conservation: https://www.doc.govt.nz/nature/pests-and-threats/animal-pests-and-threats/ferrets/

Feral cats:Feral cats are one of the most ferocious predators in our ecosystem. They feed on rabbits, birds and bird egg...
30/08/2025

Feral cats:

Feral cats are one of the most ferocious predators in our ecosystem. They feed on rabbits, birds and bird eggs, rats, hares, bats, lizards, mice, wētā and other insects.

Studies have shown feral cats have a devastating effect on native species. Here are some examples.

In 2020, a feral cat caught in Canterbury had 17 skinks in its stomach.
In 2010, a feral cat in Ohakune killed 107 bats/pekapeka in just one week.
From 2019 to 2021, feral cats caused the death of 20% of monitored kea in Arthur's Pass.
Image gallery
A feral cat and short-tailed bat remains from its stomach.
A feral cat and some of the remains of 107 dead short-tailed bats. The bats were found at the base of a bat roost tree and stashed around in piles during the time the cat was active. Image: | DOC
A feral cat eats eggs from a nest on a riverbed.
The remains of a kākāpō killed by a feral cat on Rakiura/Stuart Island.
Feral cat in the snow.

Description

We have three cat populations in New Zealand.

Domestic/house cats cared for by and living with humans.
Stray cats partly cared for by humans.
Feral cats living independently and not relying on humans for survival.
Although all three cat populations pose a threat, feral cats are a high risk to our native taonga.

Feral cats have the same appearance as common, short-haired house cats. They can grow much larger than house cats, measuring up to a metre long, including the tail. Male feral cats captured in the South Island high country averaged a weight of 3.75 kg and the heaviest male weighed 7 kg. Feral cats tend to be fitter and faster than house cats.

Where they're found

Feral cats are widespread in New Zealand. Scientists tracked a feral cat in the South Island high country that covered almost 6 km in one night. Feral cats live in a variety of habitats, including coastal areas, farmland, forests, riverbeds, sub-alpine environments and on islands.

We have no accurate estimate of the feral cat population in New Zealand.

Why they're here

Europeans used cats to control rats and mice aboard sea vessels. After Europeans arrived in 1769, cats gradually spread across the country. Settlers noted the first feral cat population 50 years later.

The threat

Impacts on our native wildlife

Feral cats are significant predators of the endangered black stilt/kakī in the Mackenzie Basin. Only 30% of young birds released through the captive rearing programme are surviving to become adults. This is due to predation by feral cats, stoats and ferrets.

Endangered black stilt/kakī, wrybill/ngutu pare and black-fronted tern/tarapirohe are heavily impacted by feral cats in South Island braided riverbeds.

Research has shown feral cats killed juvenile and adult kea in an area between Arthur’s Pass and Lewis Pass on the eastern side of the main divide. A 2019-2021 study showed up to 20% of monitored kea were killed by feral cats.

Grand and Otago skink populations are at critically low levels in Central Otago, in part due to cat predation, along with stoats, ferrets and weasels.

Both feral and domestic cats are known to hunt native bats/pekapeka.

In the 1980s, all kākāpō were removed from Stewart Island/Rakiura to stop predation by cats.

The rare Southern New Zealand dotterel, which breeds on Stewart Island/Rakiura, has suffered significant population loss due to feral cats.

On subantarctic Auckland Island, feral cats have contributed to the global or local extinction of more than 29 bird species. Evidence suggests only 13 of the 38 native bird species remain on Auckland Island.

Toxoplasmosis

Cats can transmit the parasite Toxoplasma gondii to sheep, humans and native wildlife. When cat f***s containing T. gondii get into water runoff, it can cause the deaths of both Hector's dolphins and the critically endangered Māui dolphins.

Photo and information taken from Department of Conservation: https://www.doc.govt.nz/nature/pests-and-threats/animal-pests-and-threats/feral-cats/

Wild deer:People value hunting wild deer for sport and to harvest venison. But, unless their numbers are managed, wild d...
30/08/2025

Wild deer:

People value hunting wild deer for sport and to harvest venison. But, unless their numbers are managed, wild deer can damage native plants - in some places they threaten how ecosystems function.

Seven species of deer have been established in the wild in New Zealand:

Red deer (Cervus elaphus scoticus)
Wapiti (C.elaphus nelsoni)
Sika deer (C. nippon)
Sambar (C. unicolor)
Rusa deer (C. timorensis)
Fallow deer (Dama dama)
White-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus)

Current wild deer population

Wild populations of deer can be found throughout New Zealand. These animals are the descendants of deer that were imported and released from 1851.

Red deer is the most widespread species and is also the most commonly farmed deer.

A related deer is the wapiti, which occurs in northern Fiordland.

Fallow deer were introduced from 1860 and are now found in many low-altitude forests and rural areas, partly the result of farm escapes and illegal releases.

Sika, rusa and sambar populations occur only in the North Island. Sika live predominantly in the Kaweka and Kaimanawa Forest Parks in the central North Island, rusa in the Ikawhenua Range near Galatea, and sambar in the Manawatu and Bay of Plenty.

White-tailed deer live on Stewart Island and near Lake Wakatipu in the South Island.

Conservation threat

In New Zealand, deer have no natural predators. This means they can grow to large numbers without the support of hunters and others to aid in their management.

Deer populations have been building over the past couple of decades across the country. This is because they have been harvested at a lower level than their breeding rate. As numbers have increased, deer have moved into new areas to search for food.

Deer damage native forests by feeding on forest plants, trees, and seedlings. They start with the native plants they prefer most such as schefflera, broadleaf, and hen and chicken fern in forest understoreys. Then they will move on to plants they like less. This can result in large groups of deer mainly eating falling leaves from canopy trees.

In subalpine areas, deer can damage tall tussocks and wildflowers like alpine buttercups.

By targeting these plants deer can change their composition of plants. This takes vital food and shelter from other animals. Over time this can hinder or stop forest regeneration.

Managing wild deer to reverse these effects will help protect native species and increase forests' health and resilience in dealing with climate change.

Photo and information taken from Department of Conservation: https://www.doc.govt.nz/nature/pests-and-threats/animal-pests-and-threats/deer/

Possums:The common brushtail possum, Trichosurus vulpecula, is endemic to Australia and was first introduced to New Zeal...
30/08/2025

Possums:

The common brushtail possum, Trichosurus vulpecula, is endemic to Australia and was first introduced to New Zealand from Australia in 1837 to establish a fur trade. This release was unsuccessful and a second release in 1858 at the same Southland location was required for them to establish.

The brushtail possum may be mis-named as an opossum, Didelphis sp., which is an American animal not present in New Zealand.

The possum has a thick, bushy tail, thick body fur, a pointed snout and large, pointed ears. There are two colour forms of the species - grey and black, with many variations in appearance. Possums can walk, jump and bound and its prehensile tail helps it move around tree branches.

The size and weight of possums varies across New Zealand. Typically, adult possums are 65 to 95 cm long and weigh 1.4 to 6.4 kg.

Possums are nocturnal and can live anywhere where there is shelter and a varied food supply. They are now widespread across most of New Zealand. The main habitat is forest, and possum densities can be particularly high in podocarp-broadleaf forests. Margins where forest meets pasture are also popular habitat and support very dense populations.

The threat

Possums have a significant impact on many of New Zealand’s natural ecosystems. They occur in high numbers and their own predators, such as feral cats, do not have much effect on controlling possum population size.

Leaves are the main part of their diet, but possums are opportunistic omnivores, and eat native birds and their eggs, land snails such as Powelliphanta and as invertebrates including weta. They eat buds, flowers, fruit/berries and nectar, which means they compete with native birds and reptiles for food sources. The growth and life-cycle of a tree or plant is significantly affected when all parts of it are eaten. Possums also have ‘favourites’ such as rātā or kamahi trees, leading to an even greater impact on these species.

Possums often occupy holes in tree trunks for their nests which would otherwise be used by nesting birds such as kākāriki and saddlebacks.

Dairy and deer farmers have the added worry of possums spreading bovine tuberculosis. The value of economic loss in primary production for damage and control of possums is in the tens of millions.

Evidence shows stoats and possums are eating kea. Researchers using nest-cameras have witnessed the gruesome reality inside defenceless kea nests invaded by stoats and possums in South Westland

Photo and information taken from Department of Conservation: https://www.doc.govt.nz/nature/pests-and-threats/animal-pests-and-threats/possums/

30/08/2025

Tēnā koutou katoa,
Greetings to you all,

My name is David and I am the Managing Director of Cull-Tivation Pest Management. We are a new company with a vision in line with many around New Zealand. Working in parallel with the Predator free 2050 guidelines we are striving to assist with the reduction and eradication of invasive species across the North Island particularly around the Waikato, Thames, Coromandel and Bay of Plenty areas.

Working with individuals, land owners, companies and farmers we are striving to assist in the destructive management and control of invasive pests damaging the whenua (land), ngāi tipu, (flora) and ngāi kīrehe (fauna).

Concentrating on species such as possums, stoats, rabbits, pigs, deer, goats, feral cats and selected others we utelise our knowledge and expertise to identify trails and signs, areas of concentration and the best methods for the destruction and removal of these pests.

Hei konã mai

Address

Frankton
Hamilton
3204

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