Groundwater Chronicles: Wet ‘N Lateral Stories from our Wetland WAI Project
Mon, Apr 27
|Webinar
National Estuarine Research Reserve System Science Collaborative
Time & Location
Apr 27, 2026, 4:00 PM – 5:00 PM
Webinar
About the event
Wai (freshwater) has been historically managed by Native Hawaiian communities to sustain food security on the most remote islands on Earth. In the past century, land use and socio-economic change has transformed many of Hawaiʻi’s coastal landscapes, leading to altered groundwater recharge, storage, and transport, and reduced surface water flows. To better inform biocultural restoration and future groundwater management, this collaborative research project performed an in-depth characterization of surface and groundwater flow throughout Heʻeia. Some of the most transformative aspects of this work were the collaborative process itself and the workshops, which strengthened relationships among researchers, resource managers, and educators and fostered a more nuanced collective understanding of how wai is linked to biocultural restoration. In this webinar, the team will share two major highlights of the study, answering the questions: How does surface and groundwater flow in the Heʻeia watershed; and what does water look like enterin…
