Motupipi Estuary

Learn more about this popular Golden Bay estuary.

Motupipi Estuary is a moderate-sized (169 ha), shallow, well-flushed, seawater-dominated, tidal lagoon type estuary with one tidal opening and two main basins. The western arm, dominated by the Motupipi River, responds more like a tidal river system. The upper estuary experiences salinity stratification during stable baseflows (i.e. salt wedge effect). The resulting high salinity bottom layer is generally more stable (less well-flushed) and therefore experiences nuisance algae blooms when nutrient inputs are elevated. The eastern basin is seawater-dominated, elevated, which dries rapidly and remains exposed for much of the tidal cycle. Much of the immediate estuary margin is directly bordered by developed pasture/rural land, roads, and seawalls. Causeways separate small sections of saltmarsh from the main estuary.

Historically, the Tākaka landfill was sited on the estuary margin, but heavy metals, used as an indicator of potential toxicants, were very low at sites around the estuarine perimeter of the landfill and at fine scale monitoring sites.

The catchment (41 km2) is dominated by high producing pasture (45%), native forest and scrub (37%) and exotic forestry (8%).

More information and monitoring data is also available on the LAWA website.(external link)

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