What to wear when traveling to New Zealand in April
The average daily minimum temperature in New Zealand in April is 9 degrees Celsius, and the average daily maximum temperature is 18 degrees Celsius. The weather is a bit cold.
The average daytime temperature is 18 degrees. It is recommended to wear single-layer cotton and linen suits, casual suits, professional suits and other comfortable clothes.
The average temperature at night is 9 degrees, so you need to wear warm clothes such as jackets, windbreakers, and thin sweaters.
Basic introduction
New Zealand (English: New Zealand), also translated as New Zealand, is a country with a political system that implements a constitutional monarchy mixed with a British-style parliamentary democracy. It is now the Commonwealth of Nations one of the member states. New Zealand is located in the southwestern Pacific Ocean. Its territory consists of two islands, the South Island and the North Island, separated by the Cook Strait. The South Island is adjacent to Antarctica, and the North Island faces Fiji and Tonga. The capital, Wellington, and the largest city, Auckland, are both located in the North Island.
Climate
New Zealand has a temperate maritime climate, with seasons opposite to those in the northern hemisphere. New Zealand has summer from December to February and winter from June to August. The average temperature in summer is 25℃ and in winter is 10℃. The temperature difference throughout the year generally does not exceed 15℃. The average annual rainfall in various places is 400~1200 mm.
Mineral deposits
The main mineral deposits include coal, gold, iron ore, natural gas, as well as silver, manganese, tungsten, phosphate, petroleum, etc., but the reserves are not large. Oil reserves are 30 million tons and natural gas reserves are 170 billion cubic meters. It is rich in forest resources, with a forest area of 8.1 million hectares, accounting for 30% of the country's land area, of which 6.3 million hectares are natural forests and 1.8 million hectares are artificial forests. The main products are logs, round wood, wood pulp, paper and wood boards. Rich in fisheries.
Animals
Since humans began to settle in New Zealand, many native species have disappeared in just over 1,000 years. However, the New Zealand government has increased efforts to protect nature, and the situation has changed. There is a big improvement. Protection measures include the elimination of harmful organisms in wildlife reserves, the establishment of 13 national parks, 3 marine parks, hundreds of nature reserves and ecological zones, a marine and wetland protection network, and the protection of special rivers and lakes.
Reference materials
New Zealand-Baidu Encyclopedia