New Zealand scientists to eavesdrop on Maui dolphins for answers on their habits
A detector will be used to record endangered porpoise’s high frequency ‘clicks’

Scientists are set to eavesdrop on the critically endangered Maui dolphin, as part of a year-long, Niwa-led project.
Latest estimates put the Maui dolphin population between 57 and 65 so scientists want to find out more about them in an effort to improve their chances of survival.
Maui dolphins are only found on the west coast of the North Island, with the greatest concentration between Manukau Harbour and Port Waikato.
While they are known to congregate close to shore in water less than 20 metres deep, it is uncertain how far offshore they travel and what risks they might face in doing so.
As part of a collaborative project between the Department of Conservation, the Ministry for Primary Industries and the University of Auckland, Niwa marine ecologists Dr Kim Goetz and Dr Krista Hupman are this month deploying a line of up to nine offshore acoustic moorings stretching from the shoreline to 12m offshore just south of Manukau Harbour.
Each mooring will carry two acoustic devices.