Habitat mapping reports

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.

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. More recently Council has partnered with Birds NZ to produce reports about shorebird communities of Tasman’s coast.

Coastal ecological risk assessment

Tasman estuaries

In general, the state of mud/sand tidal flats in the majority of Tasman’s estuaries is good to moderate. The condition of the remaining saltmarsh habitat is good, although a very large proportion of this habitat has been lost over the last 100 years to create farmland, roads or industrial areas. The concentration of disease-causing organisms in estuarine shellfish where there is intensive urban or pastoral land use is high and within the water the concentration is moderate or high during and after rain. Concentrations of nutrients and toxic chemicals are low. 

An overall analysis of the condition, or state, of estuaries in the district was undertaken in 2009 and is available via the link below. This report also included analysis of data collected by the Department of Conservation on the Wanganui inlet.

State of Tasman Estuaries Report 2009 (pdf 2.2 MB)

Sea floor environment

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