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Home >> Environment >> Natural resources >> Coast >> Coastal glossary

Coastal glossary

This glossary explains some of the technical words about the coast used by Waikato Regional Council.

Benthic

Marine animals that live in or on the bottom sediments of the seafloor.

Biotoxins

Poisonous chemicals produced by living organisms. Phytoplankton produce biotoxins, which can build up in shellfish and make the people who eat them sick.

Coastal marine area (CMA)

Generally, the area below mean high water springs.

For the Regional Coastal Plan definition, click here

Conductivity

The ability of a substance to conduct electricity or heat.

Ecosystem

Ecosystems are communities of living things that interact with each other and their physical environment.

For the Regional Coastal Plan definition, click here.

Enterococci

Enterococci bacteria are bacteria that usually live in an animal’s gut. They are used as an indicator of the human health risk from harmful micro-organisms present in water – for example, from human or animal faeces.

Groyne

Low barrier built out into the sea to stop the shifting of beach sand or tidal erosion.

Habitat

Habitat: the place where plants and animals live and find the food, water, light, shelter, living space, and other essentials they need to survive.

Check out the Regional Coastal Plan definition.

Infilling

Infilling is the process of sediment build up. Rivers and streams carry sediment into estuaries. The sediment settles in estuaries. The sediment builds up, until eventually the estuaries are shallower with a deeper sediment layer.

Infilling is a natural process but can be greatly accelerated by vegetation clearance in surrounding catchments.

Intertidal

The area where the sea meets the land - it is covered by the sea at high tide and exposed at low tide.

Iwi

Tribe or people (Maori).

Macrofauna

Animals larger than 500 µm (0.5 mm) is size.

Maimai

A hide or stand (often used for duckshooters’ hides).

Mean high water springs

The place on the shore where spring high tides reach on average over a period of time. It can often be recognised by the upper line of debris on the beach.

Midden

New Zealand’s early domestic rubbish dumps.

Natural character

The natural character of the coast describes the natural qualities of our coastal environment. The natural qualities can include:

  • ecological
  • physical
  • spiritual
  • cultural
  • and aesthetic values.

Even modified areas still have some degree of natural character, because some natural qualities will still be present.

Check out our technical report on Natural Character Concept Development in New Zealand Planning Law and Policy.

Check out the Regional Coastal Plan definition.

Oxygen-depleting contaminants

Contaminants that use up oxygen from the surrounding water as they decompose. Most oxygen-depleting contaminants are made of organic material (anything that originally came from a plant and or an animal) for example, sewage.

Phytoplankton

Free-floating microscopically small plants suspended in water.

Point source discharges

Discharges of contaminants from a stationary or fixed point, for example, from a ditch, pipe or drain.

Subtidal

Waters below the low tide mark.

Urupa

Maori cemetery, ancestral burial grounds, burial site, tomb.