“No boat traffic, and also no building going on in the area, and so much, much less sediment going into the harbour,” he said
“The harbour was allowed to rest.”
There was a huge resurgence of eelgrass, which provides foraging and sheltering areas for younger fish and invertebrates, Guccione said.
“It’s been a lot of ecological domino effects that have gone on,” he said.
“This may be something that took this long to come back.”
Other species had been present in the Tauranga Harbour, including moon jellyfish, which are taking advantage of a plume of plankton, according to Guccione.
“It is a return to what was almost normal,” he said.
Boat owners take note
The jellyfish first arrived four weeks ago and can pose a serious risk to boat owners, Tauranga Bridge Marina manager Tony Arnold said.
“They can get the water intake and overheat engines,” he said.
They must have their engine temperature alarms working because if they enter the water intake, they can “fry the engine”.