Creating Indigenous-led solutions to protect biodiversity in the Pacific Islands

 
 

Conservation International-Aotearoa works closely with Indigenous communities, local NGOs, and governments in Aotearoa and across the broader Pacific Islands to deliver impactful, science-based, culturally sensitive conservation solutions.

Our vision is a resilient Aotearoa, where Indigenous-led conservation drives environmental protection, cultural revitalization and sustainable development.

Aotearoa holds significant environmental and political influence across the Pacific region, presenting unique opportunities for regional conservation leadership. From our base in Auckland, we spearhead programs that benefit people throughout the region — including Tokelau, Niue, Cook Islands and the Ross Sea — and further connect to Conservation International’s efforts in Samoa, Fiji, Palau, Timor-Leste and Indonesia.

Our approach blends Māori and Pacific knowledge with cutting-edge science to enable innovative, scalable solutions that benefit nature and people.

Together with our partners, we are supporting Indigenous-led efforts focused on marine protection, sustainable development and regional collaboration.

 

Highlight project

© Richard Sidey/Galaxiid

Indigenous ocean guardianship

The Hinemoana Halo Ocean Initiative is a joint effort between Māori tribes and Conservation International-Aotearoa to protect and restore ocean habitats and biodiversity while improving climate resilience.

Named after Hinemoana, the Māori goddess of the ocean, Hinemoana Halo promotes the self-determination of Indigenous Peoples and local communities to protect, manage, monitor and restore their coastlines and waters.

As part of Hinemoana Halo, Māori and Pacific leaders united with Conservation International to create a 2.2 million-square-kilometer marine protected area that extends from Aotearoa to the Pacific Islands — the world's largest Indigenous-led marine protected area.

 

Where we work in Aotearoa

 

News from Aotearoa

A ‘manta ray ruler’ could help protect these gentle giants

© Edy Setyawan

Manta rays are some of the most highly intelligent — and threatened — fish in the sea. 

In recent years, populations of these mysterious, winged creatures have plummeted by up to 95 percent in some areas — largely as a result of overfishing or being caught unintentionally — and scientists are scrambling to better understand and protect them. 

Now, a new technique for measuring manta rays could offer critical insights into their health, reproductive status, lifespans and whether a population is growing or shrinking. 

Developed in partnership with Conservation International, the technique is as simple as it’s effective: A floating PVC pipe deployed near surface-swimming manta rays creates a reference for size, while aerial drones capture images from above to record the animals’ measurements in relation to the pipe.

“It’s basically a giant ruler, typically about 2 meters in length,” said Mark Erdmann, a marine biologist at Conservation International. “We’re calling it the ‘MantaMeasure.’”

The MantaMeasure being used to estimate the size of an oceanic manta ray in New Zealand” (Photo by Edy Setyawan)

Most methods of measuring manta rays — including visual estimates by trained scuba divers, often using underwater lasers or stereo-video cameras — are potentially disruptive. They require divers to swim close to the rays, which can be perceived as threatening to these gentle giants and interrupt their feeding, socializing, or even mating. The MantaMeasure is cost-effective, highly accurate and non-invasive, allowing scientists to record manta rays’ dimensions without stressing them — and providing crucial information for conservation efforts. 

 

“Body size can tell us a lot about the demographics of a manta ray population — from the breakdown of adults and juveniles in a group to the rates at which individuals are growing,” Erdmann said. “This information can provide insights on potential impacts from fisheries, climate change or other threats. Ultimately, that can help countries develop targeted conservation interventions and monitor their effectiveness over time.” 

The MantaMeasure is currently being used in New Zealand and could expand into other countries in the Pacific. Aerial drones can also be used to count the number of manta rays in larger feeding aggregations and identify nursery areas — something that would be virtually impossible to do from a boat.

“Sometimes it’s the simplest strategies that can have the greatest impact in conservation,” said Edy Setyawan, a Conservation International consultant and marine scientist, who has field-tested the MantaMeasure extensively. “We are using this technique with manta rays in New Zealand, but we hope to eventually apply it to manta rays in other regions, and other endangered species such as sharks and whales.”

Edy Setyawan launches a drone to measure oceanic mantas in the Hauraki Gulf, New Zealand” (Photo by Mark Erdmann)

Kiley Price is the staff writer and news editor at Conservation International. Want to read more stories like this? Sign up for email updates here. Donate to Conservation International here.

Cover image: A squadron of reef manta rays swimming on sea surface in a feeding aggregation (Photo by Edy Setyawan)


Further reading: 

 

 

Learn more

Hear directly from Conservation International employees on the ground in Aotearoa.

 

References

  1. Conservation International (2021, November). Irrecoverable Carbon. Retrieved January 2025, from https://www.conservation.org/projects/irrecoverable-carbon
  2. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. (2024). Table 8a: Total, threatened, and EX & EW endemic species in each country [Fact sheet]. https://www.iucnredlist.org/resources/summary-statistics#Summary%20Tables
  3. 30x30 SkyTruth. (2024, October). Marine Conservation Coverage. https://30x30.skytruth.org/progress-tracker?layers=6,144,7,145&settings=%7B%2522bbox%2522:%5B-167.96,-61.4,167.96,61.4%5D,%2522labels%2522:true%7D