Doubtful Sound

Doubtful Sound
Typical view of the Doubtful Sound.
Doubtful Sounds Shelter Islands.
Doubtful Sound on a clear day.

Doubtful Sound is a very large and naturally imposing fjord (despite its name) in Fiordland, in the far south west of New Zealand. It is located in the same region as the smaller but more famous and accessible Milford Sound. It took second place after said Fiord as New Zealand's most famous tourism destination.[1]

Contents

History

Doubtful Sound was named 'Doubtful Harbour' in 1770 by Captain Cook, who did not enter the inlet as he was uncertain whether it was navigable under sail.[2] It was later renamed Doubtful Sound by whalers and sealers.

A Spanish scientific expedition commanded by Alessandro Malaspina visited Doubtful Sound in February 1793 to conduct experiments measuring the force of gravity using a pendulum, a part of the effort to establish a new metric system.[3] The officers of the expedition, which included Felipe Bauzá y Cañas, a cartographer,[4] also made the first chart of the entrance and lower parts of the Sound, naming features of it. Today these form a unique cluster of the only Spanish names on the map of New Zealand: Febrero Point, Bauza Island and the Nee Islets, Pendulo Reach and Malaspina Reach.[5]

Geography

Location of Doubtful Sound on the South Island of New Zealand.

There are three distinct arms to the sound, which is the site of several large waterfalls, notably Helena Falls at Deep Cove, and the Browne Falls which have a fall of over 600 metres. The steep hills are known for their hundreds of waterfalls during the rainy season.

Access to the sound is either by sea, or by the Wilmot Pass road from the Manapouri Power Station. Most areas of the sound itself are only accessible by sea however, as the road network in this area of New Zealand is sparse or nonexistent, as is the human population.

Charles John Lyttelton, 10th Viscount Cobham, Governor-General of New Zealand (1957-1962) wrote about this part of Fiordland:

"There are just a few areas left in the world where no human has ever set foot. That one of them should be in a country so civilized and so advanced as New Zealand may seem incredible, unless one has visited the south-west corner of the South Island. Jagged razor backed mountains rear their heads into the sky. More than 200 days of rain a year ensure not a tree branch is left bare and brown, moss and epiphytes drape every nook. The forest is intensely green. This is big country... one day peaceful, a study in green and blue, the next melancholy and misty, with low cloud veiling the tops... an awesome place, with its granite precipices, its hanging valleys, its earthquake faults and its thundering cascades."

Parts of the sound on the west side of Elizabeth Island are protected by the Taipari Roa (Elizabeth Island) Marine Reserve.

Flora and fauna

Doubtful Sound is unusual in that it contains two distinct layers of water that scarcely mix. The top few meters is fresh water, fed from the high inflows from the surrounding mountains, and stained brown with tannins from the forest. Below this is a layer of cold, heavy, saline water from the sea. The dark tannins in the fresh water layer makes it difficult for light to penetrate. Thus, many deep-sea species will grow in the comparatively shallow depths of the Sound.[6]

This fiord is home to one of the southernmost population of bottlenose dolphins. The Doubtful Sound bottlenoses have formed a very insular sub-group of only about 70 individuals, with none having been observed to leave or enter the Sound during a multi-year monitoring regime. Their social grouping is thus extremely close, which is also partly attributed to the difficult and unusual features of their habitat, which is much colder than for other bottlenose groups and is also overlaid by the freshwater layer.[7] Recently (2000s), there is growing concern that the population is in significant decline, with calf survival rates having halved, as well as being noticeably lower than in captivity or in other New Zealand environments. The reasons for this are unclear, though increased tourism or the fresh-water discharge from the Manapouri Power Station (see Hydroelectricity section below) are considered potential causes.[6]

Other wildlife to be found in Doubtful Sound includes fur seals and penguins (Fiordland crested and blue), or even rare large whales[8] (Southern Right Whale, Humpback Whale, Minke Whale, Sperm Whale and some Giant Beaked Whales[9][10]). Orca, the Killer Whales and Long-Finned Pilot Whales can be found also. The waters of Doubtful Sound are also home to an abundance of sea creatures, including many species of fish, starfish, sea anemones and corals. It is perhaps best known for its black coral trees which occur in unusually shallow water for what is normally a deep water species.

The catchment basin of Doubtful Sound is generally steep terrain that is heavily forested except for locations where surface rock exposures are extensive. Nothofagus trees are dominant in many locations. In the understory there are a wide variety of shrubs and ferns, including Crown Fern, Blechnum discolor.[11]

Hydroelectricity

Deep Cove from above, near the Manapouri Hydro Power Station outlet.

Deep Cove (45°27′S 167°09′E / 45.45°S 167.15°E / -45.45; 167.15), an arm of Doubtful Sound, is the site of discharge of water from the Manapouri Power Station's tailrace tunnels. Deep Cove, like the rest of Fiordland is a unique and mostly pristine environment. The discharge of clear fresh water has had an impact on fauna and flora by letting light into the lower layers of the sound.[6] Nevertheless, this is an area naturally high in fresh water inflows (7.6 metres of rain falls annually).

References

  1. ^ Real Journeys rapt with Kiwi Must-Do's - Scoop Independent News, Tuesday 13 February 2007
  2. ^ Cook's Voyages (from Te Ara Encyclopedia of New Zealand. Accessed 2008-09-12.)
  3. ^ “Puerto del Pendulo, Doubtful Sound: The Malaspina Expedition’s Visit to New Zealand in Quest of the True Figure of the Earth”, The Globe, no.65, 2010, pp.1-18. Downloadable at: http://search.informit.com.au
  4. ^ Doubtful Sound (from Te Ara Encyclopedia of New Zealand. Accessed 2008-09-12.)
  5. ^ Science and Spycraft: The Malaspina Expedition in New Zealand and New South Wales, 1793 - Robert J. King, via Mains’l Haul, A Journal of Pacific Maritime History, San Diego, Vol 41 No. 4 & 42, No. 1, Fall/Winter 2006, Pages 76-87
  6. ^ a b c A Doubtful future - New Zealand Listener, 27 September 2008
  7. ^ Bottlenose dolphins (from Te Ara Encyclopedia of New Zealand. Accessed 2008-09-12.)
  8. ^ http://www.backpackersnews.co.nz/index.php?page=whale-sightings-up/
  9. ^ http://www.doc.govt.nz/about-doc/news/media-releases/2007/beaked-whales-sighted-in-doubtful-sound/
  10. ^ http://fiordlandkindy.blogspot.com/2009/04/whales-at-doubtful-sound.html/
  11. ^ C. Michael Hogan. 2009. Crown Fern: Blechnum discolor, Globaltwitcher.com, ed. N. Stromberg

Coordinates: 45°18′S 166°59′E / 45.3°S 166.983°E / -45.3; 166.983


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