Auckland Islands
Template:Short description Template:Use New Zealand English Template:Infobox islands

The Auckland Islands (Māori: Motu Maha "Many islands" or Maungahuka "Snowy mountains")<ref name=":0">Template:Cite web</ref> are an archipelago of New Zealand, lying Template:Cvt south of the South Island. The main Auckland Island, occupying Template:Cvt, is surrounded by smaller Adams Island, Enderby Island, Disappointment Island, Ewing Island, Rose Island, Dundas Island, and Green Island, with a combined area of Template:Cvt.<ref name=NZ_DOC/> The islands have no permanent human inhabitants.
The islands are listed with the New Zealand Outlying Islands. The islands are an immediate part of New Zealand, but not part of any region or district, but instead Area Outside Territorial Authority, like all the other outlying islands except the Solander Islands.
Ecologically, the Auckland Islands form part of the Antipodes Subantarctic Islands tundra ecoregion. Along with other New Zealand Subantarctic Islands, they were designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1998.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Geography
The Auckland Islands lie Template:Cvt south of Stewart Island, and Template:Cvt from the South Island port of Bluff, between the latitudes 50° 30' and 50° 55' S and longitudes 165° 50' and 166° 20' E.
They include Auckland Island, Adams Island, Enderby Island, Disappointment Island, Ewing Island, Rose Island, Dundas Island, and Green Island, with a combined area of Template:Cvt. The islands are close to each other, separated by narrow channels, and the coastline is rugged, with numerous deep inlets.<ref name=NZ_DOC/>
Auckland Island, the main island, has an approximate land area of Template:Convert, and a length of Template:Convert. It is notable for its steep cliffs and rugged terrain, which rises to over Template:Convert. Prominent peaks include Cavern Peak (Template:Convert), Mount Raynal (Template:Convert), Mount D'Urville (Template:Convert), Mount Easton (Template:Convert), and the Tower of Babel (Template:Convert). The southern end of the island broadens to a width of Template:Convert.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Here, the narrow channel of Carnley Harbour (the Adams Straits on some maps) separates the main island from the roughly triangular Adams Island (Template:Cvt),<ref name=LINZ/> which is even more mountainous, reaching a height of Template:Cvt at Mount Dick. The channel is the remains of the crater of an extinct volcano, and Adams Island and the southern part of the main island form the crater rim. The main island features many sharply incised inlets, notably Port Ross at the northern end.
The group includes numerous other smaller islands, notably Disappointment Island (northwest of the main island) and Enderby Island (off the northern tip of the main island), altogether covering Template:Cvt.<ref name=LINZ/>
Most of the islands have a volcanic origin, with the archipelago dominated by two 12-million-year-old Miocene shield volcanoes, subsequently eroded and dissected.<ref name = "Shirihai">Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> These rest on older volcanic rocks 15–25 million years old with some older granites and fossil-bearing sedimentary rocks from around 100 million years ago.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
Islands
The following table includes named islands according to Land Information New Zealand.<ref name=LINZ>Template:Cite web</ref>
| Location | Area Template:Br (ha) |
|---|---|
| Auckland Island | 45,916.6 |
| Adams Island | 9,695.8 |
| Enderby Island | 695.9 |
| Disappointment Island | 289.5 |
| Rose Island | 80.2 |
| Ewing Island | 58.3 |
| Ocean Island | 11.9 |
| Detached Rock | 7.5 |
| Adams Rocks | 7.5 |
| Masked Island | 5.7 |
| Figure of Eight Island | 5.3 |
| Column Rocks | 5.2 |
| Dundas Island | 4.9 |
| Sugar Loaf Rocks | 4.8 |
| Monumental Island | 4.3 |
| Lantern Rocks | 3.9 |
| Green Island | 3.0 |
| Compadre Rock | 2.8 |
| Frenchs Island | 1.9 |
| Five Sisters Rocks | 1.9 |
| Yule Island | 1.6 |
| Friday Island | 1.6 |
| Pinnacle Rocks | 1.5 |
| Pillar Rock | 1.2 |
| Blanche Rock | 1.0 |
| Amherst Rock | 0.8 |
| Shag Rock | 0.5 |
| Beehive Rock | 0.4 |
| Beacon Rock | 0.3 |
| Davis Island | 0.1 |
| Archer Rock | 0.1 |
| Template:Center | 56,816.1 |
Climate
Port Ross features a subpolar oceanic climate (Cfc according to the Köppen climate classification system). Like many other Subpolar oceanic climates, Port Ross, along with the Auckland Islands in general, are characterised by the near-constant overcast weather and never being too hot or too cold.
This borders on an extremely mild-wintered, maritime-influenced tundra climate.
| Climate data for Port Ross (1941–1945) | |||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Month | Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec | Year |
| Average sea temperature °C (°F) | 10.4 (50.8) |
10.5 (51.0) |
10.2 (50.5) |
9.6 (49.3) |
8.5 (47.4) |
7.8 (46.1) |
7.6 (45.7) |
7.2 (45.1) |
7.7 (46.0) |
8.2 (46.8) |
8.8 (47.9) |
9.5 (49.2) |
8.8 (47.9) |
Carnley Harbour also features a subpolar oceanic climate (Cfc according to the Köppen climate classification system), though it exaggerates the features shown in Port Ross, as it is much wetter and a lot more affected by ocean-moderation.
The Auckland Islands have a fairly constant cool and wet weather year-round, with neither winter being excessively cold nor summer excessively hot. The climate is most similar to that seen in the Faroe Islands and Aleutian Islands.
History

Discovery and early exploitation
Evidence exists that Polynesian voyagers first discovered the Auckland Islands. Traces of Polynesian settlement, possibly dating to the 13th century, have been found by archaeologists on Enderby Island.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> This is the most southerly settlement by Polynesians yet known.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
The whaler Template:Ship, captained by Abraham Bristow, rediscovered the islands in 1806, finding them uninhabited.<ref name = "MMcLaren">Template:Cite book</ref> Bristow named them "Lord Auckland's" on 18 August 1806 in honour of his father's friend William Eden, 1st Baron Auckland (whose son the Earl of Auckland would be namesake of New Zealand's largest city). Bristow worked for the businessman Samuel Enderby, the namesake of Enderby Island. The following year Bristow returned on Template:Ship to claim the archipelago for Britain. The explorers Dumont D'Urville and James Clark Ross visited in 1839 and in 1840 respectively.
Whalers and sealers set up temporary bases, the islands becoming one of the principal sealing stations in the Pacific in the years immediately after their discovery.<ref name = "MMcLaren"/> By 1812, so many seals had been killed that the islands lost their commercial importance and sealers redirected their efforts towards Campbell and Macquarie Islands. Visits to the islands declined, although recovering seal populations allowed a modest revival in sealing in the mid-1820s.
The sealing era lasted from 1807 till 1894, during which time 82 vessels are recorded as visiting for sealing purposes. Some 11 of these ships were wrecked off-shore.<ref>Headland, R.K. (ed.) (2018) Historical Antarctic Sealing Industry, Cambridge, Scott Polar Research Institute, p.166.</ref> Relics of the sealing period include inscriptions, the remains of huts, and graves.
Settlement
Template:Main Now uninhabited, the islands saw unsuccessful settlements in the mid-19th century. In 1842, a small party of 70 Māori and their Moriori slaves from the Chatham Islands migrated to the archipelago, surviving for about 20 years or so on sealing and flax growing. Samuel Enderby's grandson, Charles Enderby, proposed a community based on agriculture and whaling in 1846. This settlement, established at Port Ross in 1849 and named Hardwicke, lasted only two and a half years. Māori and Moriori settlement continued until 1866, when most of the Māori and some of the Moriori returned to the Chatham Islands; however, most of the Moriori settled on Stewart Island, where some of their descendants continue to live today.<ref>Conon Fraser, The Enderby settlement; Britain's whaling venture on the subantarctic Auckland Islands 1849–1852, Otago University Press, 2014.</ref>
The Auckland Islands were part of the Colony of New Zealand under the Letters Patent of April 1842, which fixed the southern boundary of New Zealand at 53° south, but they were then excluded by the New Zealand Constitution Act 1846, which defined the southern boundary at 47° 10' south; however, they were again included by the New Zealand Boundaries Act of 1863, an act of the Imperial Parliament at Westminster that extended the boundaries of the colony once more.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Shipwrecks

The Template:Ship, captained by Thomas Musgrave, was wrecked in Carnley Harbour in 1864. Madelene Ferguson Allen's narrative about her great-grandfather, Robert Holding, and the wreck of the Scottish sailing ship Template:Ship, wrecked in the Auckland Islands a few months later in 1864, counterpoints the Grafton story.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> François Édouard Raynal wrote Wrecked on a Reef.<ref>Raynal, Francois Edouard (2003). "Wrecked on a Reef or Twenty Months among the Auckland Isles – A facsimile of the text and illustrations of the 1880 edition published by Thomas Nelson & Sons, London, Edinburgh, and New York, with additional commentaries by Christiane Mortelier". Steele Roberts, New Zealand. Retrieved 27 March 2010</ref>
In 1866, one of New Zealand's most famous shipwrecks, that of the General Grant, occurred on the western coast. Ten survivors waited for rescue on Auckland Island for 18 months. Several attempts have failed to salvage its cargo, allegedly including bullion.<ref>Template:Cite encyclopedia</ref>
Because of the probability of wrecks around the islands, calls arose for the establishment of emergency depots for castaways in 1868. The New Zealand authorities established and maintained three such depots, at Port Ross, Norman Inlet and Carnley Harbour from 1887. They also cached additional supplies, including boats (to help reach the depots) and 40 finger-posts (which had smaller amounts of supplies), around the islands.<ref name="DOCantip">Template:Cite web</ref>
A further maritime tragedy occurred in 1907, with the loss of the Template:Ship and 12 of her crew, off Disappointment Island. The 15 survivors lived off the supplies in the Auckland Island depot.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
In 2019, a helicopter with three people on board crashed into the ocean near Enderby Island, when they were en route to uplift an ill man on a fishing trawler.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> All three survived the crash, and were found the next day with only minor injuries.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The rescue effort was led by Richard Hayes.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Scientific research and reserve
Three independent scientific expeditions visited the Auckland Islands in 1840.<ref name=":4">Template:Cite journal</ref> These included the United States Wilkes Expedition aboard the USS Porpoise, d'Urville's second voyage of the Astrolabe (French), and the British Ross Expedition aboard the Erebus and Terror.<ref name=":4" />
The Sub-Antarctic Islands Scientific Expedition of 1907 by the Philosophical Institute of Canterbury, New Zealand, aboard the ship Hinemoa,<ref name=":4" /> spent two weeks on the islands conducting a magnetic survey and taking botanical, zoological and geological specimens.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
From 1941 to 1945, the islands hosted a New Zealand meteorological station as part of a World War II coastwatching programme staffed by scientist volunteers and known for security reasons as the "Cape Expedition".<ref name="Coastwatchers">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name=":4" /> Along with their other duties the Cape Expedition staff undertook biodiversity research and collected scientific specimens. The staff of the Cape Expedition included Robert Falla, later an eminent New Zealand scientist.<ref name=":4" /> The 1972–1973 Auckland Islands Expedition spent several months studying the fauna and flora of the Auckland Islands.<ref name="Kenworthy1975">Template:CiteQ</ref>
Template:As of the islands have no inhabitants, although scientists visit regularly and the authorities allow limited tourism on Enderby Island and Auckland Island.<ref name=":4" />
The marine environment surrounding the archipelago became a marine mammal sanctuary in 1993 and, unusually, also a marine reserve in 2003, measuring Template:Convert.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The Subantarctic Islands marine reserves around the Auckland, Antipodes, Bounty and Campbell Islands combined form the largest natural sanctuary in New Zealand.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Ecology
Plants
The botany of the islands was first described in the Flora of Lord Auckland and Campbell's Islands, a product of the Ross expedition of 1839–43, written by Joseph Dalton Hooker and published by Reeve Brothers in London between 1843 and 1845.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Since then, many other botanists have studied the flora of the Auckland Islands, which comprises 228 vascular plant species, of which over 80% are indigenous and about 20% are introduced.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name=":1">Template:Cite book</ref>
The vegetation of the islands sub-divides into distinct altitudinal zones. Inland from the salt-spray zone, the fringes of the islands predominantly feature forests of southern rātā Metrosideros umbellata, and in places the subantarctic tree daisy (Olearia lyallii), probably introduced by sealers.<ref> Template:Cite journal</ref> Above this exists a subalpine shrub zone dominated by Dracophyllum, Coprosma and Myrsine (with some rātā). At higher elevations tussock grass and megaherb communities dominate the flora.
Template:Clear Template:Gallery
Invertebrates
The islands host the largest communities of subantarctic invertebrates, with 24 species of spider, 11 species of springtail and over 200 insects.<ref>Department of Conservation (1999) New Zealand's Subantarctic Islands. Reed Books: Auckland Template:ISBN</ref> These include 57 species of beetle, 110 flies and 39 moths. The islands also boast an endemic genus and species of wētā, Dendroplectron aucklandensis.
Fresh and saltwater fauna
The freshwater environments of the islands host a freshwater fish, the kōaro or climbing galaxias, which lives in saltwater as a juvenile but which returns to the rivers as an adult. The islands have 19 species of endemic freshwater invertebrates, including one mollusc, one crustacean, a mayfly, 12 flies and two caddisflies. The Auckland Islands cockle is endemic to the islands.
Marine mammals
There are two species of seal which haul out on the islands, the New Zealand fur seal and the threatened New Zealand sea lion. Southern elephant seals are frequent migrants in winter,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and leopard seals may also appear.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
A well-recovering population in excess of 2,000 southern right whales is found off the islands, and Port Ross area is considered to be the most important and well-established congregating ground for whales in New Zealand waters. Its importance exceeds the Campbell Island ground.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Template:Clear Template:Gallery
Birds
The islands hold important seabird breeding colonies, among them albatrosses, penguins and several small petrels,<ref name = "Shirihai"/> with a million pairs of sooty shearwater. Landbirds include red-fronted and yellow-crowned parakeet, New Zealand falcon, tūī, bellbirds, pipits, and an endemic subspecies of tomtit.<ref name=":2">Template:Cite book</ref>
The whole Auckland Island group has been identified as an Important Bird Area (IBA) by BirdLife International because of its significance as a breeding site for several species of seabirds as well as eight endemic species or subspecies, including Auckland shag, Auckland teal, Auckland rail, Auckland snipe, Gibson's albatross, Auckland Island banded dotterel, Auckland Island tomtit, and the now extinct Auckland Island merganser.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=":2" /> The seabirds include southern rockhopper and yellow-eyed penguins; Antipodean, southern royal, light-mantled and white-capped albatrosses; and white-chinned petrel.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Template:Clear Template:Gallery
Ecological history
Several introduced species have come to the islands; goats, other useful animals and seed were brought to the islands by Captains Musgrave and Norman 1865, returning to search for castaways;<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> ecologists eliminated or allowed to go extinct cattle, sheep, goats, dogs, possums and rabbits in the 1990s, but feral cats, pigs and mice remain on Auckland Island. The last rabbits on Enderby Island were removed in 1993 through the application of poison, also eradicating mice there.<ref name="torr">Template:Cite book</ref> Curiously, rats have never colonised the islands, in spite of numerous visits and shipwrecks and their ubiquity on other islands.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Introduced species have significantly negatively altered habitats and ecosystem processes, suppressed vegetation, and reduced or extirpated birds on many of the islands.<ref name=":3">Template:Cite journal</ref> They have, for example, caused the extinction of the New Zealand merganser, a duck formerly widespread in southern New Zealand, and ultimately confined to the islands until its extinction.<ref name=":3" />
The New Zealand Department of Conservation plans to remove the last remaining introduced mammals from Auckland Island, making the entire island group pest-free, in what would be one of the largest multi-species eradication plans in the world.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> This project started in November 2018, with NZ$2 million of initial scoping work. The total cost for the eradication could stretch to NZ$40–50 million over 10 years.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
List of endemic animals
- Auckland Island wētā (Dendroplectron aucklandensis)
- Auckland Islands cockle (Austrovenus aucklandica)
- Auckland rail (Lewinia muelleri)
- Auckland snipe (Coenocorypha aucklandica aucklandica)
- Auckland teal (Anas aucklandica)
- Auckland shag (Leucocarbo colensoi)
- Auckland Island merganser (Mergus australis) - extinct
- Auckland Island tomtit (Petroica macrocephala marrineri)
- Auckland Island banded dotterel (Charadrius bicinctus exilis)
- Gibson's albatross (Diomedea antipodensis gibsoni)
List of endemic plants
- Azorella schizeilema
- Callitriche aucklandica
- Cardamine depressa subsp. depressa
- Cardamine latior
- Dracophyllum cockayneanum
- Gentianella cerina
- Gentianella concinna
- Geum albiflorum
- Plantago aucklandica
- Poa aucklandica subsp. aucklandica
Legal status
The Auckland Islands – as with all of New Zealand's subantarctic islands – is a National Nature Reserve, afforded the highest possible level of protection under New Zealand law. In addition, a marine reserve encompasses all of the Auckland Islands territorial sea and internal waterways.<ref name=":0" />
All of New Zealand's subantarctic islands are managed by the Southland Conservancy of the Department of Conservation (DOC). Expedition party size, length of stay and landing on the islands are kept to a minimum. Entry is by permit only and applicants must undergo thorough pre-expedition quarantine checks.<ref name=":0" />
When Andrew Fagan made a solo voyage there in a Template:Convert plywood yacht (and nearly added to the shipwreck tally), he described the DOC permitting process thus: Template:Blockquote
See also
- Composite Gazetteer of Antarctica
- Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research
- Territorial claims in Antarctica
- List of Antarctic and subantarctic islands
- List of islands of New Zealand
References
Further reading
- Wise's New Zealand Guide (4th ed.) (1969). Dunedin: H. Wise & Co. (N.Z.) Ltd.
- Appendix to the Journals of the House of Representatives of New Zealand (1863, Session III Oct–Dec) (A5)
- Island of the Lost: Shipwrecked At the Edge of the World (2007) by Joan Druett – an account of the Grafton and Invercauld wrecks
- Sub Antarctic New Zealand: A Rare Heritage by Neville Peat – the Department of Conservation guide to the islands
- Lost Gold : Ornithology of the subantarctic Auckland Islands. (2020) by Colin Miskelly. Wellington: Te Papa Press. OCLC 1141973732
External links
Template:Commons category Template:EB9 Poster
- Auckland Islands Marine Reserve (New Zealand Department of Conservation)
- High Resolution Map
- Murihiku.com
- A Map of the Islands
- Island Information
- Historical Timeline of the Auckland Islands (abandoned website, archived (abandoned website, archived by the Wayback Machine.
- Diary of a 1962–63 biological visit by E. J. Fisher
- 1948 article on Auckland Islands Coleoptera by E. S. Gourlay
- El archipiélago de los naufragios (in Spanish)
Template:Protected areas of New Zealand Template:British overseas territories Template:Auckland Islands Template:World Heritage Sites in New Zealand Template:Authority control
- Auckland Islands
- New Zealand subantarctic islands
- Archipelagoes of New Zealand
- Archipelagoes of the Southern Ocean
- Volcanic islands of New Zealand
- Volcanoes of the New Zealand outlying islands
- Important Bird Areas of the Auckland Islands
- Moriori
- Miocene shield volcanoes
- Miocene Oceania
- Submarine calderas
- Subantarctic islands
- Uninhabited islands of New Zealand
- Former British colonies and protectorates in Oceania
- Seal hunting
- Whaling stations in New Zealand
- Endemic Bird Areas