Gliders sample parts of the ocean which satellites cannot survey, which is important for understanding ocean health which is determined by oxygen levels.
Hawke's Bay Regional Council's principal scientist Anna Madarasz-Smith says the science team want to better understand how the Bay works when it gets warmer and how algal blooms affect the water.
"We are interested in the oxygen levels in the water, which have been shown to become depleted following algal blooms, and in the marine water temperatures, especially after January when our Hawke Bay ocean waters were the highest both for us and nationally."
The glider will be operated by Dr Joanne O'Callaghanat Niwa.
She says gliders have previously been used off the coast of the central and north eastern shelf regions of New Zealand to better understand how the ocean processes work below the surface.
"This technology is still new for New Zealand and is going to do fascinating new science for the region.
"The particularly exciting thing for the Hawke's Bay work is how long it's been since widespread oceanographic data for all of Hawke Bay was last made - in the 1970s."