Auckland, New Zealand Dark volcanic rocks covered with barnacles on the coast of Milford. © Daniel Poloha/iStock

Stories in New Zealand

The Tīkapa Moana / Te Moananui-ā-Toi / Hauraki Gulf Challenge Fund

The science is clear—without ambitious and urgent action, the Hauraki Gulf’s future is uncertain.

The Tīkapa Moana / Te Moananui-ā-Toi / Hauraki Gulf is a special place. It is a taonga of national importance—for both people and nature. She is the ‘jewel—the sparkling blue sapphire—in Auckland’s crown’. If she is well, the people are well.

But this beloved body of water, her beaches, and her islands are suffering. Much has been lost and degraded. The latest State of our Gulf report released by the Hauraki Gulf Forum presents this clearly. Beneath her sparkling blue surface, agricultural runoff, untreated sewage, and litter pose a dangerous threat to the ecosystem and to the people who live in and visit the Hauraki Gulf.

Thankfully, not all is lost, and there is progress on many fronts—particularly since the establishment of the Hauraki Gulf Marine Park 20 years ago. However, the science and evidence is clear. Without drastic and urgent action, the Gulf’s future is uncertain.

Quote: State of our Gulf 2020 Report

The Gulf is special, but it’s far from pristine. Many things have been lost or degraded. It has been progressively reshaped by our activities. Sometimes visibly, sometimes invisibly…Sometimes reversibly. Often irreversibly.

Hauraki Gulf Forum

There’s a surprisingly easy way to help reverse this decline—by rebuilding the Hauraki Gulf’s mussel beds. For generations, the Gulf was flush with 1,500 km2 of mussel beds and reefs that acted as nature’s own water purification system. Just one little mussel has the power to filter enough water to fill an entire bathtub in a day.

But decades of commercial dredging and overuse have nearly wiped out the Hauraki Gulf’s mussel beds. Without the filtering power of mussel reefs, the Gulf’s waters have become murkier and more vulnerable to the effects of increasing nutrient runoff and pollution, leaving the Gulf in great danger. And time is running out.

We must address this challenge today. That’s why the Nature Conservancy (TNC) and Foundation North are partnering to establish New Zealand’s first-ever conservation challenge fund to help reverse the Gulf’s decline by focusing on restoring lost shellfish beds.

CEO of Foundation North Peter Tynan commented “The Nature Conservancy has used the Challenge Fund model successfully to save habitats in other corners of the world, so we are very excited by this opportunity to try a new philanthropic model and partner with them to accelerate international support for the restoration of Tīkapa Moana Te Moananui-ā-Toi the Hauraki Gulf.”

Funds raised through the Challenge Fund will be put towards the ambitious goal of restoring 1,000 km2 of shellfish beds to the Hauraki Gulf—nearly as many as there were historically.

First-Ever Challenge Fund to Save the Hauraki Gulf For generations, shellfish beds covered over 1,200 square kilometers of the Hauraki Gulf’s seabed. But decades of overfishing and environmental degradation have eradicated nearly all of the Gulf’s shellfish beds.

Foundation North has pledged NZD $3 million to TNC to support shellfish restoration efforts in the Gulf by challenging us to raise a further NZD $3 million from other donors. Every dollar that raised for this important work, Foundation North will match—dollar for dollar.

TNC and Foundation North envision a Gulf restored to its previous levels of abundance. The Hauraki Gulf Challenge Fund is critical in taking restoration efforts to the next level, and accelerating restorative aquaculture practices at a scale never before witnessed in the Gulf.

Hauraki Gulf Challenge Fund

Donate Now

If you’re interested in making a contribution to the Hauraki Gulf Challenge Fund, please contact emma.dent@tnc.org, or click the donate button.