Scientists hoping to boost marine life and water quality in the Hauraki Gulf are buoyed by the instant success of a trial to re-establish mussel beds on the seafloor.
Seven tonnes of live greenlipped mussels dumped in separate plots off eastern Waiheke last November have survived and are functioning as a reef, attracting fish and marine organisms, says marine scientist Dr Shane Kelly.
As these before and after pictures show, the mussels have matted together over a once barren seafloor and been colonised by a range of marine species.
The Revive our Gulf project aims to restore naturally-replenishing mussel beds which once carpeted vast swathes of the gulf, providing valuable nurseries for juvenile fish and improving water clarity with their filtering effect. The reefs were wiped out by dredging between 1910 and 1960 and replaced by sediment.