Poor Knights Islands

Biodiversity

Over 1,000 tuatara live on the Islands
One of the largest pohutukawa forests in New Zealand sets the islands a-blaze with its crimson bloom in November/December every year.
Darryl Torckler has taken this amazing composite image of the Pinnacles. It clearly shows the dramatic environment.

Converging warm water currents, a micro -climate and thousands of years of separation from the mainland have resulted in a unique biodiversity below and above the water line.

Below the water, and stretching out a nearly a kilometre all around, the Poor Knights Islands are total Marine Reserve.  Above, the Islands themselves are a designated Nature Reserve.

The complex underwater landscape is a unique environment. Subtropical and temperate marine life coexist with extraordinary diversity, beauty and density. Over 125 species of fish share this environment with soft corals, encrusting sponges, vibrant anemones, ecklonia kelp forests, mating sting rays, gorgonian fans and myriad other life forms.

A dive at the Poor Knights is a once-in-a-lifetime experience, very different to diving coral reefs or even the nearby New Zealand coast.

Above the tide line the Islands and the small stacks scattered around them are equally impressive, especially in the spring when they are tinged red by masses of flowering pohutukawa. Isolated from the mainland for many thousands of years, the Islands are the remnants of ancient volcanoes that erupted in the Pacific ‘Ring of Fire’. In places the remaining cliffs leap a shear 100m from the wave-tops and plunge an equal depths below. On the few ridges and valleys between these and lesser cliffs, a unique blend of plants, animals and insects have evolved and thrived, safe from mainland predators.

Iconic among them is the tuatara, recognised as the worlds’ only surviving dinosaur.

 

More information

Above water

Above water ›

Separated from mainland New Zealand by water for tens of thousands of years, this is the land that time forgot. Species have evolved differently, and insects and plants have grown larger.

Under water

Under water ›

Below the high tide line, a truly unique environment exists.

Contact Us

Can’t find what you want? Just ask! Freephone us in New Zealand on
0800 288 882.

Kate; You may not remember me but you called me a “lovable rogue”  I am obviously an Aussie. Janelle and I came into your shop and went diving Poor Knights one day, Janelle snorkelled and I dived. I have dived in these locations at other times: Fiji, Maldives, Solomon Islands, off “True North” out of NW Western Australia Roley Sholes and Cocos Islands but Kate I must say that the diving day with your crew was excellent and one of the best charters I have been on, thank you very much to Glenn, Dawn and Debbie.

Brian Fisher,