Wetland extent, 2001-16

Wetlands support high levels of biodiversity. They provide habitat for native invertebrates, plants, fish, and bird species (eg fernbird, kōkopu, and eels), many of which live only in wetlands. Wetlands act as ‘kidneys’ and giant sponges – they clean the water of excess nutrients and sediment, control flood water and pollutants, and act as carbon sinks (removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere). Wetlands have strong cultural and spiritual importance for Māori. They are a food source (eg eel, whitebait) and provide material for weaving (eg raupō, harakeke (flax)). Draining wetlands for agricultural and urban development over the past 150 years has led to significant wetland loss and deterioration.

Summary report available at http://www.mfe.govt.nz/publications/fresh-water/analysis-of-wetland-loss-between-200102-and-201516

More information on this dataset and how it relates to our environmental reporting indicators and topics can be found in the attached data quality pdf.

Data and Resources

Additional Info

Field Value
Theme
Author Ministry for the Environment
Maintainer Ministry for the Environment
Maintainer Email Ministry for the Environment
Source https://data.mfe.govt.nz/layer/95347-wetland-extent-2001-16/
Source Created 2018-04-16T04:15:52.845560Z
Source Modified 2018-04-17T00:59:45.575905Z
Language English
Spatial {"type": "MultiPolygon", "coordinates": [[[[166.55903723569006, -47.25502141711633], [166.55903723569006, -34.41269108819437], [178.51652549386935, -34.41269108819437], [178.51652549386935, -47.25502141711633], [166.55903723569006, -47.25502141711633]]]]}
Source Identifier https://data.mfe.govt.nz/layer/95347-wetland-extent-2001-16/
Dataset metadata created 2 February 2020, last updated 3 March 2025