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Marine biodiversity

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What is marine biodiversity?

"Biodiversity" is the name we give to the variety of all biological life. This life includes plants, animals, fungi, and micro-organisms, the genes they contain, and the ecosystems they live in.

"Marine biodiversity" refers to this variety of life in ocean, sea, and coastal environments.

Why is our marine biodiversity important?
Threats to marine biodiversity
Protecting our marine biodiversity
The Fisheries Act 1996
The New Zealand Biodiversity Strategy


Why is our marine biodiversity important?

Many New Zealand industries depend on biological resources and healthy ecosystems, including New Zealand's $1.5 billion-a-year commercial fishing industry.

Potentially useful and commercially valuable organisms may also be discovered in the future.

New Zealand's unique biodiversity is also internationally important for the following reasons:

Many of our native species are found nowhere else on Earth.
Our "clean, green" environmental image has economic value for our tourism industry and many primary producers, such as farmers and orchardists.
 
Biodiversity is valuable in itself.

Threats to marine biodiversity

Scientists around the world agree that human activity can seriously threaten marine biodiversity. The most serious threats to marine biodiversity are:

fishing - recreational and commercial
pollution with chemicals and nutrients - often from land sediments
alteration of physical habitat
invasions of exotic species introduced by boats or other carriers coming from overseas
global climate change, which affects ocean temperature and sea levels.
These threats have widespread social, economic, and biological consequences, including:
dramatic reductions in the numbers of many popular edible fish and shellfish
the extinction of species that might be useful in developing new medicines
change in the basic functioning of ecosystems
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Protecting our marine biodiversity

The Government has put in place a range of laws, strategies, and research programmes to protect our marine biodiversity.


The Fisheries Act 1996

New Zealand's Fisheries Act 1996 is the law that describes how we should manage our fisheries resources sustainably. Among other things, the Act requires that we do the following things:

Where species are associated with each other or dependent on each other, we should not take too many of them in order to make sure that the species survive in the long term.
We should maintain the biological diversity of the marine environment.
We should protect habitats that are particularly significant for fisheries management.


The New Zealand Biodiversity Strategy

The New Zealand Biodiversity Strategy is a set of goals for the country to work towards. It aims to turn the tide on the decline of our biodiversity and to maintain and restore a full range of our remaining natural habitats and ecosystems, such as forests, wetlands, and coastal environments.

The four goals are:

1. To maintain and restore a full range of remaining natural habitats and ecosystems in a healthy functioning state and viable populations of all indigenous species across their natural ranges.
2. To maintain the genetic resources of introduced species that are important to New Zealand for economic, biological, and cultural reasons.
3. To recognise the role of Màori in conserving and sustainably using biodiversity.
4. To recognise the role of communities and individuals in conserving and sustainably using biodiversity

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Theme 3 (a section of Part 3 of the Strategy) covers coastal and marine biodiversity. The environments that it covers include estuaries, coasts, and offshore areas within New Zealand's territory and other jurisdictions, for example, the Exclusive Economic Zone and Antarctica's Ross Sea. It also covers the marine species (plants, organisms that live on the sea floor, fish, marine mammals, birds, and other organisms) that live in these areas.

The Government's goals are that in the year 2020:

New Zealand's natural marine habitats and ecosystems are maintained in a healthy functioning state. Degraded marine habitats are recovering. A full range of marine habitats and ecosystems representative of New Zealand's indigenous marine biodiversity is protected.
No human-induced extinctions of marine species within New Zealand's marine environment have occurred. Rare or threatened marine species are adequately protected from harvesting and other human threats, enabling them to recover.
Marine biodiversity is appreciated, and any harvesting or marine development is done in an informed, controlled, and ecologically sustainable manner.
No new undesirable introduced species have become established, and threats to indigenous biodiversity from established exotic organisms are being reduced and controlled.
To read the New Zealand Biodiversity Strategy (PDF, 3.4MB), see www.fish.govt.nz/biodiversity/strategy/biodiversity
 
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For more information click on any link below.

 

How we conserve our fisheries | History of fishing in New Zealand | Export case study: hoki |
How humans impact on fisheries | Life under the ocean waves | Maori fisheries today |
Marine fisheries research | Orange Roughy: Delicacy from the deep |
Snapper: Everyone's favourite dish
| Why the fishing industry is important to New Zealand |
Traditional Maori fisheries | Marine biodiversity | Marine pests | Biodiversity Mgt and research | Rock Lobsters: Spiny wanderers
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