Your chance to have a say
Make an online submissions at www.option4.co.nz/gbisubform.htm
Printable submissions for people who cannot get online
at www.option4.co.nz/alerts/questionaire.pdf
(268Kb)
a copy of the map at www.option4.co.nz/alerts/map.pdf
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Marine reserve proposal by the Department of Conservation.
This document contains all the text (less pics) of the original
proposal as printed on a 16-page glossy brochure. The original PDF
document can be found on the DoC web site (577KB).
Status: Proposal stage.
Closing date for objections was 30 June but was extended to
31 July 2003.
A legacy for our children
The seas around Great Barrier Island are some of the most pristine
in the Hauraki Gulf, with a remarkable variety of underwater landscapes
and marine life. However, even here, locals are reporting that fish
aren't as plentiful as they used to be. A marine reserve will ensure
that at least one part of Great Barrier's marine world is protected
and replenished to pass on to our children and grandchildren.
A decade of discussions
Over a decade ago, the Department of Conservation began talks with
tangata whenua and local residents about the need to protect Great
Barrier Island's coastal waters. Keen to establish a marine reserve
somewhere around this island, DOC circulated a public discussion
paper and questionnaire in February 1991. Over 250 people, mainly
islanders, sent in their comments.
This early feedback expressed both concern over the decline in the
island's fisheries, and strong support for a fully protected marine
reserve on the island. The north-east coast was the favoured location
for 75% of the people who wrote in. Most respondents (65%) claimed
that a marine reserve would not cause problems for their current
activities in the area. However, three percent were totally opposed
to any marine reserve. Restrictions on fishing were the key concern.
New discoveries
Earlier discussions about possible boundaries for a marine reserve
centred on an area including the Whangapoua Estuary and beach, the
coastline immediately north and south of Whangapoua and the seas
out to and surrounding Rakitu Island.
In the years since, DOC has been carrying out further marine studies
in an area extending from Needles Point in the north to Korotiti
Bay in the south, and a large area offshore. Since the earlier marine
reserve proposals were discussed, our knowledge about marine environments
and what is needed to best protect them has expanded. Scientists
now think that larger marine reserves may be more effective because
a larger range of habitats are protected and the effect of fishing
at the reserve edges is reduced.
The most exciting discoveries were made in 2002, when a team of
scientists and locals sent a remotely operated camera down to 100
metre depths north east of Rakitu. This area, shown as only slightly
raised seafloor on the marine charts, revealed a remarkable undersea
world - deep water reefs hosting coloured sponges, black coral colonies,
jewel anemones - and kingfish.
Why a marine reserve?
Marine reserves are the 'national parks' of the sea, where underwater
features and marine life enjoy complete protection. Their purpose
is to protect representative, unique or special marine habitats
for scientific study and enjoyment.
Because much of our underwater environment has been altered by
human activities we need to protect bits that represent samples
of what was originally there. Within a reserve, marine life is left
to recover and flourish in its natural state - for its own sake
and for future generations. As with national parks, people are encouraged
to visit, marvel at and learn from marine reserves.
Most Great Barrier Island locals know that the island's seas aren't
as bountiful now as they were in 'the old days'. A marine reserve
will help restore the balance and protect the marine taonga of part
of Great Barrier's coast for the benefit of present and future generations.
A network of marine protected areas
The Government committed, in the New Zealand Biodiversity Strategy
(2000), to protect 10% of New Zealand's marine environment to help
conserve marine biodiversity. A network of marine protected areas,
which together protect a range of unique and diverse habitats and
ecosystems, will contribute to this target. It may also enable marine
species to move between protected areas - a series of safe havens
within movement range of adults or juveniles.
So far just 0.1% of the coast around mainland New Zealand is protected
within 15 marine reserves. There are three small marine reserves
in the Auckland region: Cape Rodney to Okakari Point (near Leigh),
Long Bay to Okura and Motu Manawa (Pollen Island) in the Waitemata
Harbour. Another - Te Matuku Bay on Waiheke Island - is awaiting
approval from the Minister of Fisheries.
Further north is the larger Poor Knights Islands marine reserve,
and to the south Te Whanganui-a-Hei (Cathedral Cove) on the Coromandel
Peninsula, and Mayor Island (Tuhua) marine reserves. It's the beginning
of a network that would be greatly enhanced by a marine reserve
on Great Barrier's north-east coast.
What are the benefits?
A marine reserve would help us to retain, in a natural and healthy
state, the great variety of plants and animals that live in the
diverse marine habitats found on the north-east coast of Great Barrier
Island.
Marine reserves:
- Help safeguard against environmental degradation and provide
a benchmark against which to measure human impacts in other areas.
- Help rebuild depleted stocks of snapper, crayfish and other
species, restore kelp forests and the health of marine ecosystems.
- Increase the range of fish types, as rare and more vulnerable
species flourish in the marine reserve.
- Protect the many marine processes and species we don't yet know
about.
- Act as a breeding area and reservoir for depleted marine species
and provide a source of larvae to boost populations inside and
outside the marine reserve.
- Protect large, old experienced animals which may have important
genetic and social values not protected under fisheries rules.
- Allow fish and marine life to be observed in their natural habitat,
natural sizes and numbers and exhibiting natural behaviour.
- Provide a window on a beautiful and fascinating underwater world.
Marine reserves are ideal places for scientific study, education,
snorkelling and diving, underwater photography, swimming, exploring
rock pools and eco-tourism.
Uses of the north-east coast
People undertake a range of activities on the north-east coast.
Responses to the 1991 questionnaire showed the most popular pastimes
were swimming, sightseeing, surfing, sunbathing and beach walking.
Next were boating (including sailing, windsurfing and water skiing)
and recreational fishing. Other activities were diving and snorkelling,
education, scientific study, traditional and commercial fishing
and tramping.
How would a marine reserve affect you?
The only activities that would be affected by a marine reserve in
the area are fishing, shellfish gathering and removal of shells.
Taking any marine life, including fishing and gathering shellfish,
rocks or seaweed, is not allowed in a marine reserve. However, fish
caught outside a marine reserve can be carried through the reserve.
A marine reserve on the north-east coast may have economic and
social implications for commercial and recreational fishers in the
area. However, fishing is likely to improve in the areas near the
reserve and, in the long term may benefit stocks further afield.
Visitors can take boats into marine reserves and anchor but are
encouraged to minimise disturbance to the sea floor.
A marine reserve can boost local tourism and service industries
as it becomes established. For example, the large number of visitors
to the marine reserve at Leigh has substantially benefited the local
economy.
Educational and recreational activities are encouraged in marine
reserves, as well as scientific research and monitoring.
Tangata Whenua
Tangata whenua have a long history of using Great Barrier's diverse
coastal resources. They continue to be kaitiaki and exercise manawhenua
over their interests in the north-east coastal area. Resident tangata
whenua are Ngati Rehua hapu and Ngati Wai iwi. Ngati Maru also have
an interest in the north-east coast and marine area.
Many tangata whenua wish to act as kaitiaki for the estuary, within
an overall marine reserve on the north-east coast. Many tangata
whenua also support continued but limited harvesting of shellfish
from Whangapoua Estuary. This is not allowed in a marine reserve
but tangata whenua needs could be accommodated by excluding part
of the estuary from the reserve boundary.
Who manages marine reserves?
The Department of Conservation looks after and administers marine
reserves but relies on the support and involvement of the local
community. Marine reserve regulations are enforced by DoC, sometimes
with the help of people appointed as honorary rangers. Local people
are well placed to be guardians of a marine reserve, to watch over
it and discourage potential offenders.
Area of interest for a marine reserve
The Department of Conservation would like to protect the full range
of coastal and marine habitats on Great Barrier Island's north-east
coast. This would provide a significant area for scientific research,
and ensure the survival of an outstanding legacy to pass on to future
generations.
The area under investigation for a marine reserve is shown here.
It extends from Korotiti Bay to Needles Point in the far north,
and from mean high water springs out 12 nautical miles to the limits
of the territorial sea. The area includes a wide range of marine
habitats, many of which are not represented in marine reserves elsewhere.
These include the estuarine and beach areas of Whangapoua, exposed
north-east coastline, semi-sheltered coast, Rakitu Island and its
surrounding reefs, deep rocky reefs offshore, and inshore and offshore
sediment areas.
Does size matter?
The 'best' size for a marine reserve depends on what you are trying
to protect. For some species a very small marine reserve may be
enough to protect a local population. For species that travel or
migrate a very large marine reserve may be required to be effective.
Some very mobile species may only take up temporary residence within
a reserve. Research is continuing into effective sizes for marine
reserves.
Whatever the size we know that fishing for snapper and crayfish
just outside marine reserve boundaries affects numbers in the reserve.
Fishing causes these species to be generally less abundant closer
to the edges of reserves compared to the middle. Recent research
at Leigh shows reduced snapper and crayfish numbers within two kilometres
from the end of the five kilometre long reserve. A bigger reserve
minimises this effect. The illustration below shows the 'edge effect'
close to the reserve boundary.
Larger marine reserves enable a wider range of habitats to be protected.
So far marine reserves in the Auckland region are relatively small.
A large marine reserve at Great Barrier would protect a wide range
of habitats, suffer minimal effects from fishing at the edges of
the reserve, and would add significantly to the network of marine
protected areas in the region.
Government policy is to protect 10% of New Zealand's marine environment
(the Territorial Sea to 12 nautical miles offshore) by 2010. To
date we have protected about 4% of our territorial sea, but just
0.1% around mainland New Zealand [1]. So we have some way to go
to meet this goal.
What's special about the north-east coast?
Along much of Great Barrier's north-east coastline, natural habitats
extend from the hilltops to the coast and offshore. This is uncommon
in northern New Zealand due to the extent of coastal development.
Because most of the land next to the proposed marine reserve is
already public conservation land we have a chance to protect an
unbroken sequence of natural habitats - land, estuary and sea -
and manage them together.
The north-east coast is characterised by exposed rocky shores but
has a wide range of coastal features: a sheltered enclosed estuary,
an open surf beach, sheltered sandy beaches, boulder beaches and
more sheltered rocky shores. Offshore there are sandy and muddy
sediments, gravel beds, reefs and deep rocky ground. Each of these
features supports a collection of marine plants and animals adapted
to the local conditions.
Warm waters from the East Auckland Current bring a subtropical
influence to the marine life found there and increase its biological
diversity. These waters are often remarkably clear which, with the
diverse seascapes and rich marine life, makes for spectacular underwater
viewing.
The area is one of the last strongholds of the giant packhorse
crayfish which migrate to shallow waters around north-east Great
Barrier Island each season.
The little modified Whangapoua Estuary is home to about one third
of our remaining endangered brown teal, New Zealand's unique little
duck. Sand flats and spits around the estuary are also important
feeding and roosting areas for a significant population of the threatened
New Zealand dotterel.
Surveys undertaken within the proposed marine reserve show a wide
variety of habitat types, including remarkable deep water reef areas
with black coral, sponges and a wealth of invertebrate life.
Needles Point and Aiguilles Island
This exposed area at the northern end of the proposed reserve is
characterised by steep dropoffs and spectacular underwater scenery.
Here, hydroids and seasquirts feature at depths of 15-20 metres
and schools of kingfish and other pelagic fish are common.
Rakitu Island
Rakitu, a small island six kilometres off Whangapoua beach, has
excellent scuba diving. Its rocky shores plunge to depths of over
30 metres where colourful sponges and other encrusting animals cover
the rocks. Underwater archways and caves are dotted with light-shunning
hydroids or sea fans and beautiful jewel anemones. Plankton-feeding
demoiselles and blue maomao are often present. In the archways low
light levels allow marine life normally found in much deeper water
to live at depths accessible to snorkellers.
Dragon Island, Harataonga Bay
Protected from wind and waves by Rakitu, Dragon Island is only a
short snorkel from Harataonga. The eastern end of the island hosts
a variety of deep gullies and huge boulders provide sheltered nooks
and crannies for an array of reef fish. Orange and green wrasse
and sandagers wrasse give a subtropical flavour to the diverse fish
fauna which include black angelfish, demoiselle, porae, blue moki,
red pigfish, john dory and abundant red moki.
Rainbow Reef
Named after a rainbow wrasse seen here, as well as the multi-coloured
sponges and other life on the seabed, this offshore reef sits between
the Harataonga coast and Rakitu Island. At 25 metres, it's an intermediate
habitat between the deeper sponge garden and shallower Ecklonia
kelp forest. Rock outcrops emerge from a gravel floor, which has
a rich flora of small red seaweeds. The rocky reef hosts Ecklonia,
mixed with sponges and hydroids, and harbours large fish such as
porae and snapper. Multitudes of small fishes hover over the reef
feeding on plankton drifting by.
Deep water habitats
Deep rocky reefs occur to the south-east, north and north-east of
Rakitu Island, in depths of about 110 metres. Surveyed by DOC in
2002 using a special underwater camera, this rocky ground supports
a rich variety of sponges, black coral and other invertebrates,
and is suitable habitat for hapuku. Muddy sediments of the continental
shelf to about 150 metres depth extend to the 12-mile limit of the
territorial sea. Deeper continental shelf habitats like these, with
their special seep water animals, are not represented in other marine
reserves.
Whangapoua Estuary
Whangapoua Estuary is considered nationally important due to its
large size and undisturbed nature. Conservation land surrounds the
estuary, which provides habitat for an array of birds, shellfish
and fish, as well as the smaller bacteria and fungi on which the
food chain depends.
The estuary 'feeds' the surrounding coastal marine communities
with nutrients supplied from the mangrove forest, seagrass and wetland
areas. Snails, crabs, worms and shellfish feed on micro organisms
in the estuary, which are then preyed on with each rising tide by
snapper, yellow-eyed mullet, flounder and rays. Along the water's
edge wading birds feed on rich pickings in the mud and sand.
The estuary supports significant numbers of the threatened New
Zealand dotterel and is a stronghold for one of our most endangered
endemic ducks, the brown teal. The spit is a high tide roost and
the mudflats a feeding ground for coastal birds, including the Pacific
golden plover, banded dotterel, bar-tailed godwit, variable oystercatcher
and pied stilt.
The expansive pipi and cockle beds in the estuary are an important
shellfish gathering area for local people and tangata whenua. From
consultation it was noted that shellfish are less abundant elsewhere
on Great Barrier and that shellfish populations at Whangapoua are
under pressure from the summer influx of visitors to the island.
Many locals have said they should be able to continue to have a
sustainable but small harvest of the main shellfish species from
the estuary. This view has been endorsed by tangata whenua as kaitiaki
of the estuary.
To address these concerns, an exclusion zone could be established
within the Whangapoua Estuary to allow an ongoing sustainable harvest
of shellfish. DOC is seeking your views on whether an area should
be set aside for shellfish gathering and in what location.
What happens next?
After further consultation with tangata whenua, fishers, interested
groups and the Great Barrier community, and consideration of feedback
on this discussion document, DOC will make a formal application
to the Director General of Conservation for a marine reserve. Members
of the public then have two months, from the time the application
is notified, to make submissions.
The Minister of Conservation will make the final decision on the
application, which also requires agreement from the Ministers of
Fisheries and Transport.
Establishing a marine reserve
Pre Statutory Process
(the proposal stage)
Define objectives |
See objectives below |
Initial consultation with interested groups |
1991 onwards |
Site survey and investigations |
1990 onwards |
Draft proposals formulated and public feedback incorporated
|
1991 & 1994 |
Community consultation. Discussion document circulated for
comment before preparing formal application. |
2003 |
The table of the statutory process have been left out to save space.
The objectives of a marine reserve on Great Barrier Island
are:
- To establish a marine reserve conforming to provisions of Sections
3(1) and 3(2) of the marine Reserves Act 1971.
- To protect and maintain a large section of the diverse marine
ecosystem and biodiversity on the north-east coast of Great Barrier
Island, that is ecologically continuous with already protected
adjacent terrestrial habitats.
- To protect a wide variety of marine habitats and their marine
life, including continental shelf deep water rocky and sediment
habitats not represented in marine reserves elsewhere.
- To provide a safe haven for several species of marine animals
presently impacted by fishing, and to allow them to recover to
their natural population and social structure.
- To provide a marine reserve which is large enough to minimise
side effects of fishing, and to provide a large central core area
of protection to allow ecological, social and behavioural characteristics
of marine communities to function without interference.
- To provide opportunities for scientific study, including study
of the relative merits of large versus small marine reserves.
- To provide opportunities for public enjoyment of non-extractive
high quality marine recreational activities.
- To form a link in the national network of marine reserves in
accordance with New Zealand's Biodiversity Strategy (He Kura Taiao)
and to contribute towards the Government's target of protecting
10% of New Zealand's marine environment by 2010.
Deadline for submissions has been extended to 31
July 2003
Make an online submissions at www.option4.co.nz/gbisubform.htm
Printable submissions for people who cannot get online
at www.option4.co.nz/alerts/questionaire.pdf
(268Kb)
a copy of the map at www.option4.co.nz/alerts/map.pdf
(112Kb)
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