Coastal / marine biodiversity

Tasman is home to several internationally and nationally significant estuaries and sand flats because of the rich abundance of life they support.

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Tasman District has significant coastal ecological resources including:

  • eight sites of international significance for shorebirds (Farewell Spit is also a RAMSAR site),
  • the second and third largest estuaries in the South Island (Waimea and Wanganui Inlets respectively),
  • large areas of natural dunelands (Farewell Spit),
  • large areas of seagrass communities (particularly around Wanganui Inlet and Pūponga-Pākawau),
  • salt turf communities of the West Coast part of the region,
  • Tonga Island Marine Reserve and
  • large areas of natural terrestrial coastal margins (around Abel Tasman and West Coast).

Related pages

Tasman District is home to several internationally and nationally significant estuaries and sand flat due to the rich abundance of life they support. This includes several threatened and migratory birds and many fish species,

Read more about the fish and bird populations in Tasman's estuaries.

Most of Council’s biodiversity monitoring in the coastal environment involves broad-scale mapping of habitats in estuaries and 200m coastal terrestrial margin as well as fine-scale assessments of muddy environments in estuaries.