The Human Role: Communities on the Frontline of Rodent Control

Not every hero wears hi-vis or carries a clipboard. Some wear gumboots, plant traps behind compost bins, or lead trapline walks for their school.
Behind every success story in New Zealand’s fight against invasive rodents is a web of dedicated people-urban dwellers, rural landowners, marae, students, retirees, and community groups-rolling up their sleeves for the good of the land.
In this post, we shine a light on the people powering pest control, and offer practical tips on how you can join the movement-whether you live in the city, the country, or somewhere in between.
Local Legends: Conservation in Action
Across Aotearoa, grassroots groups are proving that collective action works. Here are a few examples of the impact people are making:
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Te Motu o Kura / Bare Island (Hawke’s Bay): Local iwi and DOC worked together to remove rodents and protect nesting seabirds. The result? Dramatic increases in burrow-nesting populations.
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Predator Free Miramar Peninsula (Wellington): A densely populated suburb, but also one of the most successful urban trapping zones. Residents coordinate hundreds of trap boxes through community maps and digital apps.
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Ōrokonui Ecosanctuary (Otago): Fencing, education, and sustained trapline work have transformed this valley into a safe haven for kākā, tuatara, and other native species.
From backyard efforts to coordinated regional strategies, it's people-not just policy-that are driving outcomes.
Urban Rodent Control: Don’t Underestimate Your Backyard
Rodent problems aren’t just “out there” in the bush. Many of our towns and cities are bustling with rat and mouse activity. Bird corridors, rivers, railway lines, compost bins, and even pet food bowls all create ideal environments for rodents to thrive.
Urban residents can help by:
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Installing backyard trap boxes with long-life lures (e.g., Smooth Aniseed Lure)
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Keeping compost secure and pet food indoors
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Joining or starting a local Predator Free group
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Logging trap catches on free apps like Trap.NZ to support coordinated data
Even one or two traps, maintained consistently, can make a meaningful difference-especially in green spaces near reserves or schools.
Rural Landowners: Your Land, Their Habitat
For lifestyle block owners, farmers, and forest stewards, rodents often go unnoticed until damage is done. Yet these areas offer vast ground for protection and restoration if managed well.
Top actions for rural landowners:
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Establish consistent trap networks, particularly around bush margins, waterways, or wetland edges.
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Use species-specific bait blocks (like D-Block) to target both rats and mice.
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Regularly check and refresh baits or lures to maintain effectiveness.
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Consider integrating traps with existing pest plant or possum control schedules.
For those with larger areas, rotating bait types and investing in multi-kill traps can significantly improve results over time.
It’s Not Just Trapping-It’s Culture Shift
Successful community-led conservation isn’t just about equipment-it’s about shared values. When trapping becomes as normal as weeding the garden or cleaning the gutters, that’s when real change sticks.
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Schools teach ecological responsibility through trap-building projects.
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Marae incorporate pest control into land restoration and food sovereignty work.
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Neighbourhoods host “trap-building days” or mapping workshops to share knowledge.
These localised efforts build pride, connection, and momentum-proving that the Predator Free 2050 goal is as much about people as it is about predators.
How to Get Involved (No Matter Who You Are)
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New to trapping? Start with one box and check it weekly. Log your catches.
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Already involved? Invite a neighbour, offer a spare trap, or mentor a school group.
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Own land? Make trapping part of your land care routine. Use long-lasting, weather-resistant tools.
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Want to do more? Connect with your local Predator Free group or conservation trust.
Final Thought
“The future of our native species won’t be decided in a lab or office-it’ll be shaped by the people who care enough to act.”
Rodent control isn’t someone else’s job. It’s a shared responsibility. And across Aotearoa, everyday people are proving that change starts in our own backyards.