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Story: Seabirds – overview

Currents and water masses around New Zealand

Currents and water masses around New Zealand

The arrows indicate warm (red) and cool (blue) surface currents around New Zealand. They are driven by west winds, and are deflected by land masses and frontal zones between water masses of different temperatures (which resist mixing because of their different temperatures and salt concentrations). Where water is well mixed by currents, eddies, winds, upwellings, and where cold and warm waters meet, nutrients that would normally sink are stirred towards sunlit surface waters. There, they can be used by phytoplankton (tiny drifting algae and bacteria). Phytoplankton form the basis of the marine food web, feeding microscopic animals (zooplankton), and in turn larger marine invertebrates, fish, squid, and other seabird prey.

Abbreviations:
ACC – Antarctic Circumpolar Current; DC – D’Urville Current; EAUC and WAUC – East and West Auckland Currents; ECC – East Cape Current; SAF – Subantarctic Front; STF – Subtropical Front; TF – Tropical Front; WC – Westland Current.

About this item

NIWA - National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research

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How to cite this page:

Kerry-Jayne Wilson. 'Seabirds – overview', Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand, updated 24-Sep-11
URL: http://www.TeAra.govt.nz/en/seabirds-overview/1/3