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Groups: Land Formats: KEA

  • Annual rainfall Units: percentage of normal, 1972

    Ministry for the Environment
    Annual rainfall is the total accumulated rain over one year. Rain is vital for life, including plant growth, drinking water, river ecosystem health, and sanitation. Floods and droughts affect our environment, economy, and recreational opportunities. This layer shows the annual rainfall as a percentage of normal across New Zealand for 1972 as part of the...
    Created 2 February 2020 Updated 3 March 2025
  • Nitrate-nitrogen leaching from beef livestock 2017

    Ministry for the Environment
    Raster layer with 100m * 100m pixels, Each pixel represents the estimated nitrate-N leached in kg/ha/yr. This layer contains all nitrate leaching estimated from beef cows. 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.
    Created 2 February 2020 Updated 3 March 2025
  • Growing season soil moisture deficit, 2003-2004

    Ministry for the Environment
    Soil moisture is important for plant growth. A lack of moisture content over a growing season is a good indicator of drought, which can have social, environmental, and economic impacts. Increasing temperatures and changes in rainfall patterns are expected to increase the frequency and intensity of drought in many regions. Growing season soil moisture...
    Created 2 February 2020 Updated 3 March 2025
  • Standardised soil moisture deficit 1998-1999

    Ministry for the Environment
    Soil moisture is important for plant growth. A lack of moisture content over a growing season is a good indicator of drought, which can have social, environmental, and economic impacts. Increasing temperatures and changes in rainfall patterns are expected to increase the frequency and intensity of drought in many regions. Growing season soil moisture...
    Created 2 February 2020 Updated 3 March 2025
  • Growing season soil moisture deficit, 1998-1999

    Ministry for the Environment
    Soil moisture is important for plant growth. A lack of moisture content over a growing season is a good indicator of drought, which can have social, environmental, and economic impacts. Increasing temperatures and changes in rainfall patterns are expected to increase the frequency and intensity of drought in many regions. Growing season soil moisture...
    Created 2 February 2020 Updated 3 March 2025
  • Growing season soil moisture deficit, 2009-2010

    Ministry for the Environment
    Soil moisture is important for plant growth. A lack of moisture content over a growing season is a good indicator of drought, which can have social, environmental, and economic impacts. Increasing temperatures and changes in rainfall patterns are expected to increase the frequency and intensity of drought in many regions. Growing season soil moisture...
    Created 2 February 2020 Updated 3 March 2025
  • Seasonal rainfall, autumn, 1981–2010

    Ministry for the Environment
    Rain is vital for life – it supplies the water we need to drink and to grow our food, keeps our ecosystems healthy, and supplies our electricity. New Zealand’s mountainous terrain and location in the roaring forties mean rainfall varies across the country. Changes in rainfall amount or timing can significantly affect agriculture, energy, recreation, and...
    Created 2 February 2020 Updated 3 March 2025
  • Ocean and coastal extreme waves (6m), 2012

    Ministry for the Environment
    These data estimate the occurence of extreme wave events in coastal and oceanic waters for 2012, particularly for wave events where significant wave height exceeds a threshold of 6 metres and for a period of at least 12 hours. Significant wave height is defined as four times the square root of the variance of sea surface elevation due to wave motion. More...
    Created 2 February 2020 Updated 3 March 2025
  • Long-term average chlorophyll-a concentration, 1997–2014

    Ministry for the Environment
    The average concentration of chlorophyll-a (chl-a) in phytoplankton over the period 1997–2014. Concentrations of chl-a in phytoplankton are used to assess primary productivity in our oceans. Phytoplankton are primary producers of biomass and form the basis of the oceans’ food chains.
    Created 2 February 2020 Updated 3 March 2025
  • Land Environments New Zealand (LENZ) - Level 3 Grid (2009)

    Ministry for the Environment
    Land Environments of New Zealand (LENZ) is a classification of fifteen climate, landform, and soil variables chosen for their relevance to biological distributions. Classification groups were derived by automatic classification using a multivariate procedure. Four levels of classification detail have been produced from this analysis, containing 20, 100,...
    Created 2 February 2020 Updated 3 March 2025
  • Growing season soil moisture deficit, 1992-1993

    Ministry for the Environment
    Soil moisture is important for plant growth. A lack of moisture content over a growing season is a good indicator of drought, which can have social, environmental, and economic impacts. Increasing temperatures and changes in rainfall patterns are expected to increase the frequency and intensity of drought in many regions. Growing season soil moisture...
    Created 2 February 2020 Updated 3 March 2025
  • Monthly mean primary productivity (1997–2016)

    Ministry for the Environment
    The average concentration of chlorophyll-a (chl-a) in phytoplankton over the period 1997 to February 2016. Concentrations of chl-a in phytoplankton are used to assess primary productivity in our oceans. Phytoplankton are primary producers of biomass (mass of living organisms) and form the main basis of marine food chains. They use the chl-a pigment to...
    Created 2 February 2020 Updated 3 March 2025
  • Annual sea surface temperature difference from normal, 2014

    Ministry for the Environment
    The oceans store most of the excess energy accumulated due to increased greenhouse gases in the atmosphere warming the surface layer. These long-term increases in temperature caused by climate change are in addition to natural variability where ocean temperatures change in response to climate oscillations like the El Niño Southern Oscillation. Changes in...
    Created 2 February 2020 Updated 3 March 2025
  • Annual average sea surface temperature, 1996

    Ministry for the Environment
    The ocean waters surrounding New Zealand vary in temperature from north to south. They interact with heat and moisture in the atmosphere and affect our weather. Long-term changes and short-term variability in sea-surface temperatures can affect marine processes, habitats, and species. Some species may find it hard to survive in changing environmental...
    Created 2 February 2020 Updated 3 March 2025
  • Annual sea surface temperature difference from normal, 2013

    Ministry for the Environment
    The ocean waters surrounding New Zealand vary in temperature from north to south. They interact with heat and moisture in the atmosphere and affect our weather. Long-term changes and short-term variability in sea-surface temperatures can affect marine processes, habitats, and species. Some species may find it hard to survive in changing environmental...
    Created 2 February 2020 Updated 3 March 2025
  • Sunshine hours 2009

    Ministry for the Environment
    "Sunshine is important for our health and recreation, and for the environment. It is also important for our agriculture-based economy, for example, for plant growth. This layer shows annual sunshine hours across New Zealand for 2009 as part of the data series for years 1972 to 2013. Data is for a calendar year (January-December). The National Institute of...
    Created 2 February 2020 Updated 3 March 2025
  • Land Environments New Zealand (LENZ) - Level 2 Grid (2009)

    Ministry for the Environment
    Land Environments of New Zealand (LENZ) is a classification of fifteen climate, landform, and soil variables chosen for their relevance to biological distributions. Classification groups were derived by automatic classification using a multivariate procedure. Four levels of classification detail have been produced from this analysis, containing 20, 100,...
    Created 2 February 2020 Updated 3 March 2025
  • Total rainfall, 2015

    Ministry for the Environment
    This layer is the total rainfall for the year 2016, summed from interpolated daily rainfall, in mm, not the average. 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.
    Created 2 May 2021 Updated 3 March 2025
  • Annual rainfall Units: percentage of normal, 1975

    Ministry for the Environment
    Annual rainfall is the total accumulated rain over one year. Rain is vital for life, including plant growth, drinking water, river ecosystem health, and sanitation. Floods and droughts affect our environment, economy, and recreational opportunities. This layer shows the annual rainfall as a percentage of normal across New Zealand for 1975 as part of the...
    Created 2 February 2020 Updated 3 March 2025
  • Average sea–surface temperature, 1993–2012

    Ministry for the Environment
    The ocean waters surrounding New Zealand vary in temperature from north to south. They interact with heat and moisture in the atmosphere and affect our weather. Long-term changes and short-term variability in sea-surface temperatures can affect marine processes, habitats, and species. Some species may find it hard to survive in changing environmental...
    Created 2 February 2020 Updated 3 March 2025