Neuseeland News – Reisen, Abenteuer und Tourismus fuer deutschsprechende Neuseeland-Reisende

Neuseeland News ist ein deutschsprachiges Online Reise- and Tourismus-Magazin exklusiv aus Neuseeland fuer Abenteuer, Reisen und Urlaub downunder.

  • Home
  • News
  • Features
  • Adventure
  • Advertising – Marketing – Contact
You are here: Home / Features / NEW ZEALAND: New exhibition about Marine Protection in Auckland

NEW ZEALAND: New exhibition about Marine Protection in Auckland

New Zealand: Beyond the city of Auckland’s shoreline lie the outer reaches of the Hauraki Gulf Marine Park – an ocean abundant with life, yet largely unknown to most – Image: NZ Maritime Museum/Richard Robinson © 2022

A new, immersive exhibition will be presented from this week at the New Zealand Maritime Museum (Hui Te Ananui a Tangaroa) in Auckland. Ngā Huhua: Abundance, brings the extraordinary Hauraki Gulf Marine Park to the heart of Auckland city and is open from 7 November 25.  

Through stunning underwater photography and immersive videography, visitors will encounter some of the Gulf’s most surprising residents: seven-metre-wide manta rays, critically endangered Bryde’s whales, several species of dolphins and toothed whales, turtles, sunfish, seals and unique NZ storm petrels, among many others. The exhibition blends science, Māori art and storytelling in a multi-sensory experience. Interactive displays are brought to life by the voices of indigenous ocean advocates.

“This exhibition is a celebration, but also a call to protect our ocean (moana),” says Vincent Lipanovich, New Zealand Maritime Museum Director. “Ngā Huhua: Abundance (Ngā Huhua means abundance in Maori) gives visitors the chance to explore a marine world most are likely never to have seen, and to understand why more protection of Te Moana-nui-a-Toi (the great ocean of Toi = Hauraki Gulf) is so urgent.”

“Our parents and grandparents remembered a time when whales brought life with them, when seabirds were healthy and everywhere, and kai moana (seafood) was abundant,” says Opo Ngawaka, former chair of Ngāti Rehua Ngātiwai ki Aotea Trust. “Now, the birds are declining, species have been overfished, and we are seeing the effects of foreign and local exploitation. We don’t want our tamariki (children) to just inherit what’s left, we want to make it better for the generations to come.”

New Zealand

Ngā Huhua: Abundance runs from 7 November 2025 to July 2026 at the New Zealand Maritime Museum Hui Te Ananui a Tangaroa. Entry is free for Aucklanders – Image: NZ Maritime Museum/R Robinson

More than a quarter of the Southern Hemisphere’s marine mammal species have been sighted in Te Moana-nui-a-Toi, along with more than 20 per cent of the world’s seabird species. But while rich with life, it is also under huge pressure from human activity, marine heat waves and the effects of climate warming. Overfishing has seen populations of key members of the food web such as seabirds, schooling fish, kingfish, crayfish, and scallops decline to a shadow of their former abundance. Invasives like Caulerpa seaweed and the long-spined sea urchin are spreading, and microplastics, noise pollution and bottom trawling pile stress on this incredible ecosystem.

Despite its global importance, very little of the outer Hauraki Gulf is fully protected. Even with recent passing of The Hauraki Gulf Tīkapa Moana Marine Protection Bill, only 6 per cent will be declared a high protection area, falling well short of the 30 per cent global target adopted by many Pacific nations, including Australia. Once a world leader in marine protection, with the first ever marine reserve at Goat Island 50 years ago, New Zealand is now considered a laggard internationally.  

“This exhibition is significant for our people as we have witnessed first-hand the decline of what was once an ocean pulsing with life. We have been at the forefront of efforts to protect and restore it, advocating for 350km coastline and water spaces against the impacts of dredge spoil dumping, overfishing, invasive species, and climate pressures. Only by bringing these stories and this imagery to the people do we help them understand what is at stake,” says Te Kauri Wihongi, Deputy Chair of Ngāti Rehua Ngātiwai ki Aotea Trust.

About New Zealand Maritime Museum Hui Te Ananui a Tangaroa

The New Zealand Maritime Museum, part of Tātaki Auckland Unlimited, is where stories of people and the sea are preserved, shared, and explored. Aotearoa is one of the most maritime nations in the world and the museum houses one of the nation’s most important heritage collections, covering the breadth of our relationship with te moana; from the Great Pacific Migration a thousand years ago to the cutting edge of technology and design used in America’s Cup and modern yachting.  maritimemuseum.co.nz (NAN 05-11-25)

You might also like:

UN report: Global climate ambitions ‘off target’

A new UN report shows that global temperatures continue to rise despite a slight slowdown in emissions. It reiterates the call for countries to be more ambitious on climate action. As global leaders head to the Brazilian city of Belem to discuss how to keep weiterlesen…

Teile das

NEWS

New Zealand

NON-STOP FLIGHTS TO PARADISE: Air New Zealand announces new route from Christchurch in New Zealand to Rarotonga in the Cook Islands. Air New Zealand is turning up the heat for South Islanders next winter, giving travellers a new direct route to sunshine, sand and sea – no stopover required. The new seasonal service will operate up to three times a week from May through to October 2026. Flights are available to book from Wednesday 5 November 25.

FEATURES

FILM: Russell Crowe portrays Hitler’s right-hand man in ‘Nuremberg’

James Vanderbilt’s “Nuremberg” pairs Russell Crowe and Rami Malek in a prestige retelling of the Nazi tribunal, framed as a psychological duel between Hermann Göring and the US Army psychiatrist studying him. “Nuremberg” is what used to be called an Oscar movie. Or, less charitably, “Oscar bait”: The new film from director James Vanderbilt takes weiterlesen…

AUSTRALIA: How the plastics industry shifted responsibility for recycling onto you, the consumer

Australia’s recycling system has been lurching from one crisis to another for decades. Soft-plastic schemes are collapsing, kerbside contamination is on the rise, and states are still struggling to coordinate a coherent national approach. But the deeper problem isn’t technical. It’s historical — and moral. For 70 years, the packaging industry has led advertising and weiterlesen…

NEW ZEALAND: New exhibition about Marine Protection in Auckland

A new, immersive exhibition will be presented from this week at the New Zealand Maritime Museum (Hui Te Ananui a Tangaroa) in Auckland. Ngā Huhua: Abundance, brings the extraordinary Hauraki Gulf weiterlesen...

AUSTRALIA: What Queensland’s new tourism strategy means for the industry’s future

The state of Queensland in Australia has set out a new long-term vision for tourism, with sustainability and ecotourism at its core. Global certifying organisation EarthCheck’s Stewart Moore and weiterlesen...

Abenteuer

SÜDSEE: Die Macht der Motive – Wie der Tatau Polynesien formte

NEUSEELAND: In Kaikoura mit Delfinen schwimmen und Albatrosse hautnah erleben

TRAVEL-TIP: Architecture tourism in Germany

CONSERVATION: New Zealand’s “new population” – From 5 million to 695 billion

weiterlesen...

News

BRAZIL: Making forest protection more lucrative than destruction

NEW ZEALAND: Wildlife cruise company Black Cat acquires iconic Kaikoura Eco-Tourism business

NEUSEELAND: Junge Deutsche stirbt auf Wandertour

UN report: Global climate ambitions ‘off target’

weiterlesen...

Newsletter

Copyright © 2025 · Newspac Media Ltd · Log in