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Frequently asked questions about wetland identification

https://archive.gw.govt.nz/faqs-spotting-a-natural-wetland

Frequently asked questions about wetland identification

Updated 11 November 2021 12:31pm

Is having a wetland on my property a good thing?

Is having a wetland going to cost me money?

What services are available to help me if I think I have a wetland?

What is the Clarkson method?

How can I find out if I have an area of improved pasture? 

Why can’t landowners do a pasture assessment themselves?

What’s the difference between a wetland and a natural wetland? 

Is there a minimum size for a wetland site?

What is a Schedule F3 natural wetland?

What regulations govern the management of a natural wetland?

 Is having a wetland on my property a good thing?

  • If you think you have a wetland on your land, that’s great news for the environment and your community! Wetlands of every shape and size are beneficial to our environment and communities. They help to maintain water quality, reduce the impacts of flooding and drought, and some can lock up carbon to protect us from climate change.
  • Wetlands provide important habitat for a wide variety of plants and animals, and are of significant cultural importance for Māori.
  • Some work may need to be done to help protect your wetland. However, you might qualify for funding and support from the Greater Wellington Regional Council (GWRC) to carry out fencing, restoration planting or pest control. 

 Is having a wetland going to cost me money?

  • Restoring and protecting natural wetlands can cost money, but there is support available if you meet the criteria.
  • The GW Healthy Waterways Programme offers financial aid to landowners for fencing to exclude stock, pest control, and planting, and information and advice to support anyone restoring waterways and wetlands.

For more information and to confirm whether you meet the criteria for funding and support visit the Healthy Waterways section of our website or email wetlands@gw.govt.nz.

 What services are available to help me if I think I have a wetland?

Depending on your circumstances, GWRC can provide services such as:

  • A GW ecologist (or recommended external specialist) can undertake the national wetland identification protocols (the Clarkson Method) for identifying a wetland and defining its boundaries.
  • A GW trained employee (or recommended external specialist) can complete a pasture assessment which determines whether the wetland is dominated by pasture species, and therefore whether the wetland rules and regulations apply.
  • A GW biodiversity expert can work with you to prepare a wetland restoration management plan.

 What is the Clarkson Method?

  • Wetlands and their boundaries can be identified using the national Wetland Delineation Protocols (also known as “the Clarkson Method”)  
  • This method uses 2m x 2m vegetation quadrants to measure the abundance of plant species which are adapted to wet conditions.
  • GW can provide advice on wetland delineation but we do not provide a list of recommended ecologists.

 How can I find out if I have an area of improved pasture?

  • GW uses a pasture assessment methodology to determine whether a wetland meets the 50% pasture exception.  As for the Clarkson method, 2m x 2m vegetation plots are used to assess the proportion of pasture species in the wetland area.
  • This pasture assessment needs to be completed by an expert. To have a pasture assessment completed, please contact wetlands@gw.govt.nz.

Check out our wetland identification flowchart.

 Why can’t landowners do a pasture assessment themselves?

Some wetlands are obvious and easy to identify. Others can be very tricky, and require a certain level of specialist knowledge and experience, especially in establishing the boundary of a natural wetland.  Examples of where a pasture assessment might be required are in paddocks that have patches of rushes, or in paddocks that become very wet over winter.

The pasture assessment needs to be completed by an expert. Attempting to complete this assessment without appropriate training could lead to an incorrect result (e.g. incorrectly identifying an area as wet pasture rather than a natural wetland). This poses a risk to a landowner who might carry out activities within this wetland area that are not permitted by national or regional regulations or rules.  

 What’s the difference between a wetland and a natural wetland?

The regulations and rules that set out what can and can’t be done in a wetland apply to ‘natural wetlands’, rather than all wetlands.  A ‘natural wetland’ is a wetland (as defined in the RMA) that is not:

a) A wetland constructed by artificial means unless it was constructed to offset impacts on, or restore, an existing or former natural wetland.

b) A geothermal wetland

c) Any area of improved pasture that, as of 3 September 2020, is dominated by (more than 50% of) exotic pasture species and is subject to temporary rain-derived water pooling.

 Is there a minimum size for a wetland site?

  • Although the rules and regulations that manage what can or can’t be done in a natural wetland don’t state a minimum size, wetlands that are smaller than 3 metres in diameter will not be identified as natural wetland by the Clarkson identification methodology.
  • Practically, there has to be a minimum size, otherwise an area with a single wetland plant would qualify as a wetland.
  • The 3m diameter was selected to accommodate the 2m x 2m plots (i.e. 2.8m across the diagonal) used in the Clarkson Method. This means that natural wetlands have to be at least 7m2 to be affected by rules and regulations.

 What is a Schedule F3 natural wetland?

  • The PNRP lists those natural wetlands that are larger than 0.1 ha that had been identified at the time that this plan was notified in 2015.
  • The location of these Schedule F3 wetlands is shown on the PNRP GIS maps.
  • Schedule F3 lists identified significant natural wetlands for the purpose of managing livestock exclusion under PNRP Rule R97.

 What regulations govern the management of a natural wetland?

National regulations

Regional Regulations

What services are available to help me if I think I have a wetland?