The Noises
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The Noises are a collection of islands lying northeast of
Rakino Island Rakino Island is one of the many islands in the Hauraki Gulf, an arm of the Pacific Ocean to the northeast of Auckland, New Zealand. Rakino is a small island north-east of Motutapu Island. The island is long and about wide and has an area of 1. ...
in
Auckland Auckland (pronounced ) ( mi, Tāmaki Makaurau) is a large metropolitan city in the North Island of New Zealand. The List of New Zealand urban areas by population, most populous urban area in the country and the List of cities in Oceania by po ...
's Hauraki Gulf, off the coast of the
North Island The North Island, also officially named Te Ika-a-Māui, is one of the two main islands of New Zealand, separated from the larger but much less populous South Island by the Cook Strait. The island's area is , making it the world's 14th-largest ...
of New Zealand. The largest and most forested islands are Ōtata and Motuhoropapa; Orarapa and Maria/Ruapuke are also significant. After a rat eradication campaign in the 1960s, Maria was the first New Zealand island to become predator-free. The lack of invasive predators, intact native forest, and large numbers of breeding seabirds give the Noises significant conservation value. There has however been a marked decline in marine biodiversity surrounding the islands from over-fishing.


Geography

The Noises consist of a number of small islands and stacks in the inner Hauraki Gulf, a few kilometres north-east of
Rakino Island Rakino Island is one of the many islands in the Hauraki Gulf, an arm of the Pacific Ocean to the northeast of Auckland, New Zealand. Rakino is a small island north-east of Motutapu Island. The island is long and about wide and has an area of 1. ...
and north of Waiheke Island. They are about 24 km northeast of
Auckland Auckland (pronounced ) ( mi, Tāmaki Makaurau) is a large metropolitan city in the North Island of New Zealand. The List of New Zealand urban areas by population, most populous urban area in the country and the List of cities in Oceania by po ...
, and are visible from the Auckland–Waiheke ferry. The three largest islands are Ōtata (15 ha, 67 m in height), which is 700 m away from Motuhoropapa, (9.5 ha, 50 m), and Maria, also known as Ruapuke (2.0 ha). There are five small islets and several rock stacks: Orarapa Island (or the Haystack), a small isolated stack 1.1 km south-west of Motuhoropapa; Sunday and Scott Islands, two islets on the north-western side of Ōtata; David Rocks (also known as the Four Islands), itself made of five islets, four of which are joined at low tide, 1.8 km east of Ōtata; Ike Island and Tern Rock, north of Motuhoropapa; Tākapu Rock; and Zeno Rock. File:The Noises • Tern Motuhoropapa Ike Scott Sunday Ōtata • Joseph Neureuter.jpg, Looking north from Ōtata Island. Motuhoropapa Island (left) with Tern Rock (just visible), Ike Island to its right, and Scott and Sunday Islands in the centre File:The Noises • Ōtata Sunday Scott • Joseph Neureuter.jpg, Left to right: Ōtata Island, Sunday Island, and Scott Island, looking south-east File:The Noises • David Rocks Maria • Joseph Neureuter.jpg, Looking south towards Auckland, with David Rocks (left) and Maria Island (right) The islands are composed of complexly folded Jurassic greywackes and argillites, with rocky indented shorelines and wave-cut platforms that expose up to 25 of rock at low tide. There are no permanent streams or other fresh water. The islands are surrounded by sheltered, shallow rocky reefs, with muddy or sandy seafloor in deeper areas. Approximately 18,000 years ago during the
Last Glacial Maximum The Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), also referred to as the Late Glacial Maximum, was the most recent time during the Last Glacial Period that ice sheets were at their greatest extent. Ice sheets covered much of Northern North America, Northern Eur ...
when sea levels were over 100 metres lower than present day levels, the Noises were hilly features which were surrounded by a vast coastal plain where the Hauraki Gulf / Tīkapa Moana exists today. Sea levels began to rise 7,000 years ago, after which the Noises became islands separated from the rest of New Zealand.


Name

One theory, although never proved, French explorer Dumont D'Urville came across the islands in 1827 and named them ''Les Noisettes'' ("The Hazelnuts"), which, later corrupted to "the Noisies" or "the Noises", is the likely origin of the islands' English name. Local
Māori Māori or Maori can refer to: Relating to the Māori people * Māori people of New Zealand, or members of that group * Māori language, the language of the Māori people of New Zealand * Māori culture * Cook Islanders, the Māori people of the C ...
refer to the Hauraki islands as the ''Ngā Pōito o Te Kupenga O Taramainuku'' (the floats of the net of Taramainuku). Taramainuku is a star, the captain of the waka in the constellation Te Waka-o-Rangi, next to Matariki. Taramainuku casts his net or ''kupenga'' every night to gather the souls of the deceased.


Ownership

The Noises were visited and inhabited by Māori from several
iwi Iwi () are the largest social units in New Zealand Māori society. In Māori roughly means "people" or "nation", and is often translated as "tribe", or "a confederation of tribes". The word is both singular and plural in the Māori language, an ...
over the centuries, who collected seafood and seabirds such as grey-faced petrels. A
midden A midden (also kitchen midden or shell heap) is an old dump for domestic waste which may consist of animal bone, human excrement, botanical material, mollusc shells, potsherds, lithics (especially debitage), and other artifacts and ecofact ...
on Ōtata is only the second archaeological site in the Auckland region with evidence of occupation before the eruption of
Rangitoto Rangitoto Island is a volcanic island in the Hauraki Gulf near Auckland, New Zealand. The wide island is a symmetrical shield volcano cone, reaching a height of . Rangitoto is the youngest and largest of the approximately 50 volcanoes of the Au ...
about 600 years ago. One owner, J. J. Craig, built a cottage on the south-east corner of Ōtata Island, and sold the Noises to a Captain McKenzie in 1930. Captain Frederic Stanley Wainhouse, deputy harbour master for Auckland Harbour Board, purchased the island group from him in 1933 for £200. Wainhouse remarried in 1940 to Margaret Neureuter, and from 1942 the Wainhouses spent a significant portion of their lives living on the islands, keeping chickens and brewing their own beer. Fred Wainhouse died on Ōtata Island in 1957, and his widow passed on ownership of the islands that year to her nephew Brian P. Neureuter, who in turn passed it on to his son. When Brian and Marlene Neureuter died, their ashes were scattered on the island. In 1995 the Neureuter family formed the Noises Trust, to which they gifted the islands. There are only three structures on the Noises: the Neureuter family bach on Ōtata; a hut on Motuhoropapa built by the Wildlife Service around 1977 during a study of the island's Norway rats, restored by the University of Auckland in 2014; and a navigation light installed on Maria Island in 1953.


Flora

The Noises have never been cleared or farmed, and so retain some of the highest-quality native vegetation of the inner Hauraki Gulf islands. Their lack of invasive mammals and low weed numbers make them important from a conservation point of view, and a seed source for regeneration projects on other islands. The forest on Ōtata was damaged by an accidental fire sometime between 1925 and 1930, but has now largely regenerated to a closed canopy 4–8 m high. It is dominated by pōhutukawa ('' Metrosideros excelsa)'', red matipo ''( Myrsine australis),'' coastal karamu ('' Coprosma macrocarpa)'', karo (''
Pittosporum crassifolium ''Pittosporum crassifolium'', commonly called karo, is a small tree or shrub native to New Zealand. Karo's original distribution was generally the top half of the North Island, although now it has naturalised throughout New Zealand and overseas ...
)'', houpara (''
Pseudopanax lessonii ''Pseudopanax lessonii'', or houpara, is a New Zealand native tree belonging to the family Araliaceae. Description Houpara is a shrub or tree up to 6 m tall, with stout branches. The leaves are crowded towards the tips of branchlets, and are 3- ...
)'' and māhoe (''
Melicytus ramiflorus ''Melicytus ramiflorus'' (māhoe or whiteywood) is a small tree of the family Violaceae endemic to New Zealand. It grows up to 10 metres high with a trunk up to 60 cm in diameter, it has smooth, whitish bark and brittle twigs. The dark- ...
).'' An 800-year-old pōhutukawa near the house is 70 m across at the crown. Karo on Ōtata reaches close to its maximum size, with trunks 40 cm in diameter. The understory includes bracken (''
Pteridium esculentum ''Pteridium esculentum'', commonly known as bracken fern, Austral bracken or simply bracken, is a species of the bracken genus native to a number of countries in the Southern Hemisphere. Esculentum means edible. First described as ''Pteris escul ...
''), cutty grass ('' Gahnia lacera''), and coastal astelia (''
Astelia banksii ''Astelia banksii'' is an evergreen silver-green plant from the beaches of New Zealand. It likes it best in partial shade and in infertile and well-drained soil Soil, also commonly referred to as earth or dirt Dirt is an unclean m ...
''). Motuhoropapa has a more mature forest with a canopy averaging 6–10 m high and reaching 20 m. Similar to Ōtata's, it contains pōhutukawa, karo, houpara, māhoe, and coastal karamu, but also includes wharangi ('' Melicope ternata''). Kohekohe ('' Dysoxylum spectabile)'' occurs in the understorey. The other islands in the Noises are forested with karo, houpara, taupata (''
Coprosma repens ''Coprosma repens'' is a species of flowering shrub or small tree of the genus ''Coprosma'', in the family Rubiaceae, native to New Zealand. Common names include taupata, tree bedstraw, mirror bush, looking-glass bush, New Zealand laurel and sh ...
''), and ngaio (''
Myoporum laetum ''Myoporum laetum'', commonly known as ngaio or mousehole tree is a plant in the family Scrophulariaceae endemic to New Zealand, including the Chatham Islands. It is a fast growing shrub, readily distinguished from others in the genus by the tra ...
''). Maria Island has no pōhutukawa, but is forested with taupata and coastal mahoe ('' Melicytus novae-zelandiae).'' Clearing the summit in the 1950s to build the safety light may have allowed the establishment of invasive weeds, notably the vine ''
Dipogon lignosus ''Dipogon lignosus'', the okie bean, Cape sweet-pea, dolichos pea or mile-a-minute vine, is a species of flowering plant in the legume family, Fabaceae. It is the only species classified in the monotypic genus ''Dipogon'' which belongs to the su ...
,'' known as "mile-a-minute". Mile-a-minute is a significant problem on Maria, and there are regular volunteer efforts to control it. Invasive boxthorn (''
Lycium ferocissimum ''Lycium ferocissimum'', the African boxthorn or boxthorn, is a shrub in the nightshade family (Solanaceae). The species is native to the Western Cape, Eastern Cape, and Free State provinces in South Africa and has become naturalised in Austral ...
'') is also known from five islands in the group.


Fauna

Because the Noises are currently free of introduced mammalian predators such as rats, mice, or kiore, they are rich in species that are rare or absent on the mainland. Raukawa geckos (''
Woodworthia maculata ''Woodworthia maculata'', also known as the New Zealand common gecko or Raukawa gecko, is a species in the family Diplodactylidae. The specific name ''maculata'' means "speckled".''New Zealand Frogs and Reptiles'', Brian Gill and Tony Whitaker, D ...
''), copper skinks (''
Oligosoma aeneum The copper skink (''Oligosoma aeneum'') is a skink of the family Scincidae that is endemic to the North Island of New Zealand. Taxonomy and systematics The number of skink species endemic to New Zealand is not yet known, as advancing molecular ...
)'' and shore skinks ('' O. smithi)'' are present on Ōtata; the gecko is also found on Maria Island. One hundred flax snails/pupuharakeke (''
Placostylus hongii ''Placostylus hongii'' is a species of very large, air-breathing land snail, a terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusc in the family Bothriembryontidae.MolluscaBase eds. (2021). MolluscaBase. Placostylus hongii (Lesson, 1830). Accessed through: ...
'') were released on Motuhoropapa Island in 1934 by malacologist
Baden Powell Baden-Powell () is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Baden-Powell * The Rev. Prof. Baden Powell (mathematician) (1796–1860), mathematician, clergyman and liberal theologian. By his first marriage father of: :* Baden Henry Powell ...
, from a population on Archway Island in the Poor Knights. The tiny charopid landsnail ''Climocella haurakiensis'' was described in 1996 from specimens collected on Ōtata and Motuhoropapa. The giant wētā ''
Deinacrida heteracantha ''Deinacrida heteracantha'', also known as the ''Little Barrier giant wētā'' or ''wētāpunga'' (Maori: ''wētāpunga''), is a wētā in the order Orthoptera and family Anostostomatidae. It is endemic to New Zealand, where it survived only on L ...
'' or wētāpunga, bred in captivity at
Auckland Zoo Auckland Zoo is a zoological garden in Auckland, New Zealand, situated next to Western Springs Park not far from Auckland's central business district. It is run by the Auckland Council with the Zoological Society of Auckland as a supporting ...
since 2012, has been translocated to the Noises: 1000 juveniles were released in 2015 and 300 in 2018. The Noises are breeding sites for eight seabird species, including grey-faced petrels ('' Pterodroma macroptera''), which breed in burrows on Ōtata, Motuhoropapa, Sunday, Scott, and Maria Islands from August to December. Kororā or little penguins (''
Eudyptula minor The little penguin (''Eudyptula minor'') is a species of penguin from New Zealand. They are commonly known as little blue penguins or blue penguins owing to their slate-blue plumage and are also known by their Māori name . The Australian lit ...
'') are not as common as they once were but some still breed in burrows, some even occasionally underneath the house on Ōtata. Maria Island is one of only six colonies of white-faced storm petrels (''
Pelagodroma marina The white-faced storm petrel (''Pelagodroma marina''), also known as white-faced petrel is a small seabird of the austral storm petrel family Oceanitidae. It is the only member of the monotypic genus ''Pelagodroma''. Description The white-faced ...
'') in the wider Gulf. Pied shags (''
Phalacrocorax varius The Australian pied cormorant (''Phalacrocorax varius''), also known as the pied cormorant, pied shag, or great pied cormorant, is a medium-sized member of the cormorant family. It is found around the coasts of Australasia. In New Zealand, it ...
'') breed regularly in trees on the south-east side of Ōtata. Thirty two species of land birds are present, thirteen breeding there, including fantails ('' Rhipidura fuliginosa''), silvereyes ('' Zosterops lateralis''), tūi, bellbird and grey warblers ('' Gerygone igata''). Introduced brown quail ('' Synoicus ypsilophoris'') were common in the 1920s and '30s but had disappeared by 1960, probably because of the arrival of Norway rats.
Spotted shag The spotted shag or pārekareka (''Phalacrocorax punctatus'') is a species of cormorant endemic to New Zealand. Though originally classified as ''Phalacrocorax punctatus'', it is sufficiently different in appearance from typical members of that ...
s or kawau tikitiki (''Stictocarbo punctatus'') were common in the Hauraki Gulf as recently as 1910, but fishermen at the time regarded them as competitors for their catch, and they were widely persecuted and shot for sport. More than half the Gulf's spotted shag nesting colonies had been abandoned by 1920, and by 1931, when the species achieved legal protection, the only remaining colonies in the Gulf were at eastern Waiheke Island and at David Rocks in the Noises;
Robert Falla Sir Robert Alexander Falla (21 July 1901 – 23 February 1979) was a New Zealand museum administrator and ornithologist. Early life Falla was born in Palmerston North in 1901 to George Falla and his wife, Elizabeth Kirk. As his father was wor ...
and Arthur Pycroft erected notices around the David Rocks colony to warn people the birds were protected by law. By the 1950s 40 spotted shags were seen at a nesting colony on Ōtata Island, and two hundred on David Rocks. In 1970 a colony of 100 birds was recorded on Ōtata, and 25 on David Rocks, but these petered out soon after. By the 1980s or 1990s spotted shags had finally disappeared from the Noises. This corresponded with illegal shooting of birds in the colony, increasing boating and fishing around the islands, and dramatic declines in populations of pilchards and anchovies in the Gulf.


Conservation

The Noises have not always been free of introduced mammals. Rabbits were present until the mid-1940s. Norway rats ('' Rattus norvegicus'') began to arrive in the 1950s, either swimming from garbage dumped from a ship or stowing away on boats travelling to Ōtata and Maria Islands. Once established, they were able to swim between the other islands. Rats reached Ōtata in 1956, Maria in late 1959, David Rocks in 1960, and Motuhoropapa in 1962. The effects of rats were first noted in late 1959, when they were found to be killing chicks of white-faced storm petrels on Maria Island and David Rocks. Hundreds of dead petrels were discovered by Waiheke schoolteacher Alistair McDonald, who with his class formed a junior division of
Forest and Bird Forest & Bird ( mi, Te Reo o te Taiao), also known by its formal name as the Royal Forest and Bird Protection Society of New Zealand, is an environmental organisation specialising in the protection and conservation of New Zealand's indigenous f ...
, and in January 1960 wrote to the Department of Internal Affairs requesting £5 to purchase
warfarin Warfarin, sold under the brand name Coumadin among others, is a medication that is used as an anticoagulant (blood thinner). It is commonly used to prevent blood clots such as deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism, and to prevent strok ...
rat poison. Twice in 1960 poison baits were laid by Junior Forest and Bird, and the campaign was continued by
Don Merton Donald Vincent Merton (22 February 193910 April 2011) was a New Zealand conservationist best known for saving the black robin from extinction. He also discovered the lek breeding system of the kākāpō. When Merton began his work as a conser ...
of the New Zealand Wildlife Service until September 1963. By 1964 this effort had eradicated rats from Maria Island and David Rocks – the first New Zealand islands to become predator-free, and one of the first successful island rat eradications in the world and the Maria Island colony survived and recovered. Rats were eradicated from the remaining Noises islands in the 1980s, but have reinvaded by swimming at least six times since then, from as far as Rakino (2 km away) until that too had a rat eradication programme. The islands have been predator free since 2002. In 2019 a team from
Auckland Council Auckland Council ( mi, Te Kaunihera o Tāmaki Makaurau) is the local government council for the Auckland Region in New Zealand. It is a territorial authority that has the responsibilities, duties and powers of a regional council and so is ...
and
Auckland Museum The Auckland War Memorial Museum Tāmaki Paenga Hira (or simply the Auckland Museum) is one of New Zealand's most important museums and war memorials. Its collections concentrate on New Zealand history (and especially the history of the Auckla ...
constructed an artificial spotted shag colony on a cliff face on the northeastern side of Ōtata, with 3D-printed replica birds, recorded shag calls played over a solar-powered sound system, hand-woven nests, and white paint to imitate
guano Guano (Spanish from qu, wanu) is the accumulated excrement of seabirds or bats. As a manure, guano is a highly effective fertilizer due to the high content of nitrogen, phosphate, and potassium, all key nutrients essential for plant growth. G ...
. The decoy shags were based on specimens in Auckland Museum, collected by museum staff in the Noises in 1913. It was hoped that shags would colonise from nearby breeding colonies on Waiheke Island and Tarahiki Island, which have an estimated population of 300 breeding pairs of birds, possibly genetically distinct from spotted shags in the
South Island The South Island, also officially named , is the larger of the two major islands of New Zealand in surface area, the other being the smaller but more populous North Island. It is bordered to the north by Cook Strait, to the west by the Tasman ...
. Ōtata was chosen, being a former colony site and close enough to be seen by passing shags but far enough to give access to richer feeding grounds. As of 2021, spotted shags had been observed visiting the artificial colony, though establishing a breeding population could take many years.The soft seafloor around the Noises is notable for the presence of rhodoliths or coralline algae, as well as dog cockles (''
Tucetona laticostata ''Tucetona laticostata'', or the large dog cockle, is a salt water clam or marine bivalve mollusc in the family Glycymerididae. Despite the common name, it is not closely related to the common cockle. The word dog cockle implies that it roughly ...
),'' whose accumulated mounds of thick shells are colonised by encrusting and free-living invertebrates. This rich habitat provides a nursery for young scallops ('' Pecten novaezelandiae'') and snapper ('' Pagrus auratus''). The Noises are also, however, a favoured area for recreational fishing, with 60–80 boats around the islands on some days. The scallop beds have been extensively dredged, and harvested by divers and much of the sea-floor habitat has been destroyed, leading to a decline in horse mussels (''
Atrina zelandica ''Atrina zelandica'', one of several species known as the horse mussel, is a large species of saltwater clam in the family Pinnidae, the pen shells. This species is found around New Zealand New Zealand ( mi, Aotearoa ) is an island cou ...
''),
sponge Sponges, the members of the phylum Porifera (; meaning 'pore bearer'), are a basal animal clade as a sister of the diploblasts. They are multicellular organisms that have bodies full of pores and channels allowing water to circulate through t ...
s, and rhodoliths. Extensive fishing has led to the decline of snapper and the almost complete disappearance of koura or spiny rock lobsters (''Jasus edwardsii'') in the Hauraki Gulf. This has probably led to a trophic cascade, with an increase in the number of kina (''Evechinus chloroticus'') and the consequential decline of kelp (''
Ecklonia radiata ''Ecklonia radiata'', commonly known as spiny kelp or leather kelp, is a species of kelp found in the Canary Islands, the Cape Verde Islands, Madagascar, Mauritania, Senegal, South Africa, Oman, southern Australia, Lord Howe Island, and New Z ...
'') creating kina barrens. The Neureuter family have observed over several generations a decline in marine life at Ōtata, including the disappearance of baitfish, squid, and koura, and the decrease in size and abundance of snapper, trevally, kingfish and kahawai (''
Arripis trutta ''Arripis trutta'', known as kahawai in New Zealand and as the Australian salmon in Australia, is a Pacific Ocean, South Pacific marine fish and one of the four extant taxon, extant species within the genus ''Arripis'', native to the cooler wate ...
''). The 2017 Hauraki Gulf Marine Spatial Plan proposed a marine protected area around the Noises, with a surrounding community co-management area, with the goal of allowing the recovery of marine life.


In culture

A radio-collared rat named Razzo was deliberately released on Motuhoropapa to test rat dispersal; he swam to Ōtata before being trapped under the Neureuter's sink. His story was the subject of a 2006 children's book by
Witi Ihimaera Witi Tame Ihimaera-Smiler (; born 7 February 1944) is a New Zealand author. Raised in the small town of Waituhi, he decided to become a writer as a teenager after being convinced that Māori people were ignored or mischaracterised in literat ...
, ''The Amazing Adventures of Razza the Rat''.


See also

*
Islands of New Zealand New Zealand consists of more than six hundred islands, mainly remnants of a larger land mass now beneath the sea. New Zealand is the seventh-largest island nation on earth, and the third-largest located entirely in the Southern Hemisphere. Th ...


References


Notes


External links

*
A Song for the Noises
' (short video narrated by Sue Neureuter) * {{DEFAULTSORT:Noises Uninhabited islands of New Zealand Islands of the Hauraki Gulf Private islands of New Zealand Islands of the Auckland Region