Living Water partners Fonterra and the Department of Conservation (DoC) have created silt traps on two Waikato peat lakes they're working to restore - lakes Ruatuna and Rotomanuka in Waipa District.
Described as "critically threatened" under the Land Environments of New Zealand Threatened Environments Classification, peat lakes are globally rare ecosystems. The Waikato is home to more than 30 of them.
The Waikato peat lakes area is one of five key catchments where Fonterra and DoC work in their Living Water partnership programme.
Living Water Fonterra North Island project manager Tim Brandenburg says the peat lakes are an integral part of New Zealand's landscape, with silt traps a key contributor to restoring lake water quality.
"The majority of pollution comes from sediment and excess nutrients that drain off cleared lands surrounding the lakes. Silt traps are like a vital organ the ecosystem needs to recover - they act like a kidney," said Mr Brandenburg.
"We're artificially creating what would normally happen in nature - when a stream meanders through a wetland, and filters out silt coming downstream," says Tim.
These culturally and historically important peat lakes are a significant focus for Living Water, as part of its mission to improve water quality and increase the abundance of native wildlife in five catchments where intensive dairying exists.
DoC Living Water Waikato site lead Mike Paviour said: "We've given the lakes the equivalent of a kidney transplant."
"On top of that, we're planting both the silt traps and lake edges with thousands of native wetland plants to provide habitat for native wildlife.
"We're excited to see the native species thrive as habitat becomes established, and we'll be working to improve public access so everyone can enjoy it." Living Water works with farmers, iwi, hapu, community groups and key stakeholders to improve the abundance and variety of native wildlife and water quality. The Waikato peat lakes catchment includes three lakes where Living Water continues on its mission to help restore Waikato's unique peat ecosystems.