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Mitigation systems
Developing techniques for protecting, enhancing and rehabilitating the biodiversity of freshwater ecosystems and the cultural value they provide. -
Catchments to estuaries
Understanding and predicting the connections between catchments and estuaries to improve the management of diffuse-source contamination. -
Causes and effects of water quality degradation
Understanding and predicting the sources of contaminants, developing technologies to clean up the sources, and understanding the consequences of water quality degradation for aquatic ecosystems and human use of waterways. -
Environmental flows
This programme is focussed on understanding the effects of human use of surface and groundwater systems to inform more sustainable water allocation decisions that benefit ecosystems and communities. -
Hydrological observations and predictions
How much water is in our rivers and groundwater aquifers, how has that has changed over time and how might it change in the future?
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Freshwater programme overview
NIWA's Freshwater Centre organises its work around seven research programmes.
See the following pages to find out more about our research. -
Scientists discover freshwater flows affect polar oceanic microbes
News article31 October 2012 -
First sighting of volcano responsible for undersea eruption
News article29 October 2012 -
Reclassifying karengo (nori)
Research ProjectThe seaweed known colloquially as nori in Japanese - used for making sushi - or karengo in Maori has been reclassified by an international team of scientists including NIWA's Dr Wendy Nelson. -
Globalisation of aquatic plant pests
Research ProjectNew Zealand's geographic isolation and relatively recent colonization provide the opportunity for a unique genetic analysis of plant movement patterns to be explored. -
Sedimentation in New Zealand estuaries
Research ProjectEstuaries in New Zealand are experiencing sedimentation at higher rates than before humans arrived here: this represents a loss both for land and estuary productivity. We need to better understand what has been happening so that we can predict the future and fight these losses. -
Southwest Pacific Tropical Cyclone Outlook: Near average or slightly above average numbers for many islands likely, and increased activity in the late season near Tonga and Niue
News article18 October 2012