12 June 2019
Research catamaran, Ikatere
The Clive Hard seabed will be mapped this month through a joint project with NIWA and Hawke’s Bay Regional Council.
The NIWA team arrived on their 14m-long research catamaran, Ikatere, on 10 June to learn more about the seabed and
marine environment in Clive Hard, the seabed stretching along the coast from Clive to Cape Kidnappers ).
NIWA Project Manager Kevin Mackay says, “We use something called a multi-beam echosounder sonar to map the seabed, and
from that we can classify ecosystems and habitats.”
“We create maps that tell us where the sand is, where the rocks are, or where there’s mud. But it’s more than just the
mud or the sand – we can tell what’s going on from the shapes we see. Biodiversity loves rough habitat, that’s what they
thrive on, so when we find the lumpy bits we know there’ll be lots of biodiversity,” says Mr Mackay.
The monitoring is to help NIWA and the Regional Council identify what areas are important for biodiversity habitat, and
to improve ongoing reporting on the state of the marine environment.
“We know the Clive Hard is significant in the coastal marine area because it supports biodiversity, so we want to know
more about how healthy it is,” says Anna Madarasz-Smith, Regional Council senior coastal scientist.
Ikatere will be mapping around 30 square kilometres above the Clive Hard until 24 June, and will be visible from the
foreshore near Clive.
ENDS