Vol.12 No.4 - December 2004

NIWA scientists have documented a warming trend in the Tasman Sea using data collected as part of a collaboration with scientists from Scripps Institution of Oceanography (USA) and CSIRO (Austalia). We hypothesise a link with declining hoki stocks in Ocean variability and hoki decline.

PDF of this article (200 KB) Thomas Wilding A study of almost 700 invertebrate samples from around New Zealand is helping to extend our understanding of stream ecosystems. Water managers in New Zealand are increasingly using invertebrates to monitor stream health, encouraged by initiatives such as the Ministry for the Environment’s national sampling protocol. But as the use of invertebrates as a monitoring tool becomes more widespread, the limits of our understanding become more of an issue.
PDF of this article (282 KB) Juan Sánchez Di Tracey Helen Neil Peter Marriott Thickets of coral on the deep-ocean floor have secrets to tell us about past environmental conditions. But first we have to get them to tell us their age. Some bamboo corals from New Zealand waters (Isididae: Keratoisidinae). With their segmented trunks made of alternating calcareous white nodes and organic dark internodes, “bamboo corals” get their common name from their tropical plant lookalikes.
PDF of this article (156 KB) Melissa Bowen Ken Richardson Matt Pinkerton Aarno Korpela Michael Uddstrom Computer analysis of satellite data is giving us new insight into how the ocean moves around New Zealand. Pictures of the surface of the ocean taken by satellites often show beautiful swirls, curls, and plumes. When the pictures are animated, the features can appear to be slowly moving. Some of this apparent movement reflects underlying currents pulling the features along.
PDF of this article (244 KB) Graham Rickard Mark Hadfield Modelling ocean currents helps focus our view of the “big picture”. We take for granted the weather forecast: it’s a familiar feature in newspapers, radio, and television, and we spend most of our time in the atmosphere where this weather happens. We are often less aware of the effects of ocean “weather”.
PDF of this article (392 KB) Janet Bradford-Grieve Mary Livingston Philip Sutton Mark Hadfield Changing conditions in the Tasman Sea may have brought hard times for newly hatched hoki larvae. Declining hoki stocks Hoki catch. (Photo: N. Bagley) Fisheries managers and fishers have become worried about the ongoing decline in the western stock of hoki. This stock is now estimated to be at about 13% of the biomass that existed before fishing developed for this species in 1972.
PDF of this article (314 KB) Pip Nicholls Anne-Maree Schwarz Nicole Hancock Fertilisation experiments are showing that some mangroves grow well with a little nitrogen. Love them or loathe them, mangroves are an integral part of New Zealand’s estuarine ecosystems. Like all large plants, they significantly influence many key processes, such as nutrient cycling. They also play a vital role in coastal sediment stabilisation. In the tropics, mangroves are highly valued as habitats for many fish and invertebrate species; however, many of these mangrove ecosystems are under threat.
On this page Tsunami: the great waves – knowledge is safety Fuelling science by young people NIWA hosts meeting of infrared experts from NDSC Winston Churchill Fellowship End of a trap New quick guides simplify identification of freshwater flora and fauna Focus on corallines Recent publications by NIWA staff Tsunami: the great waves – knowledge is safety Tsunami is one of New Zealand’s underrated natural hazards. The last major event was caused by a massive earthquake in Chile in May 1960.
PDF of this article (224 KB) Michael Reid Robin Wybrow Craig Woodward Scientists have probed the secrets of the lake sediments to help in the rehabilitation of Te Pātaka o Rakaihautū. Ko Te Waka Uruao, Ko Rakaihautū te tangata tuatahi, Ko Te Pātaka o Rakaihautū te whenua nei. The first man was Rakaihautū, his canoe was the Uruao, the name of this land is the Storehouse of Rakaihautū. According to Ngāi Tahu tradition, a great waka – Uruao – arrived out of the mists of time to the shores of Te Wai Pounamu.
PDF of this article (219 KB) Anne-Maree Schwarz Fleur Matheson Trevor Mathieson Seagrasses are integral to our estuaries and coastlines, but they are vulnerable to the impacts of development. Seagrasses in the estuarine landscape Subtidal seagrass fringe in Whangapoua Harbour. (Photo: M. Francis) Seagrasses are the only flowering plants that grow in the sea. They probably colonised the marine environment about 100 million years ago from freshwater and coastal saltmarsh ancestors, and now they play an important role in coastal ecosystems.
PDF of this article (175 KB) Ngaire Phillips A better understanding of how freshwater creatures fit into their habitats can point the way to conserving ecosystems. Next time you look at a mayfly in a fast-flowing stream you might notice that it has a nice flat body shape and that it hugs the pebbles. You might even think that these characteristics (or traits) would be pretty useful in helping it to resist the flow and allow it to “fit” into this rather harsh environment (at least from the mayfly’s viewpoint).
PDF of this article (317 KB) Fleur Matheson Mary de Winton John Clayton Tracey Edwards Experimental work points to yet another way that a major aquatic weed damages New Zealand lakes. Hornwort (Ceratophyllum demersum) is an invasive, submerged weed that has a major effect on habitat quality in New Zealand’s freshwater environments. Like other water weeds (such as egeria and lagarosiphon), hornwort can form dense, unsightly, and hazardous weed beds which can displace our valuable native plant communities and remove vital habitat for fish and other freshwater biota.