Lake Horowhenua


Lake Horowhenua is located in the Horowhenua District, an area of the southern Manawatū-Whanganui region in New Zealand's North Island. It covers an area of.
The lake, also known as Punahau, is an aeolian lake that lies on a sandy plain west of Levin and from the coast of the Tasman Sea. It is a shallow lake, only some deep, fed by various small streams, and is drained by the Hokio Stream.

History

The lake was once surrounded by podocarp forest as the centre of a rich wetland ecosystem. Today the trees are gone and the wetland has been substantially drained. The lake is owned by the Māori Muaūpoko iwi, who, with the help of the Horowhenua Lake Trust, are actively attempting to restore the wetland system to its former state as a conservation area.
In the 1820s the Muaūpoko were attacked by Te Rauparaha and the Ngati Toa. Two island on the lake were destroyed and heavy casualties suffered by the Muaūpoko people.

Water Quality

Between 1952 and 1987 treated sewage from Levin was dumped into the lake. This has contributed significantly to the current eutrophic state of the lake.