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Mauna Loa
Kohala Watershed Partnership Logo

Kohala Watershed Partnership

History & Mission

Kohala Mountain’s watershed and native forest found within is the main source of drinking and irrigation water for North and South Kohala and parts of Hāmākua. The native forest functions like a sponge, capturing rain and fog and replenishing streams and groundwater.

In 2003, the Kohala Watershed Partnership (KWP), a voluntary group of major private landowners, public resource managers, and committed organizations, came together to protect and restore Kohala’s native forested watershed across property boundaries for water recharge, biodiversity, Hawaiian culture, and other benefits.

KWP’s work in the 67,000-acre watershed is guided by a 20-year management plan linked below that defines actions for minimizing threats to the watershed while preserving its resources.

Drinking water reservoir
Drinking water reservoir
Irrigation water ditch
Irrigation water ditch
Stream with bank of sphagnum moss (Sphagnum palustre)
Stream with bank of sphagnum moss (Sphagnum palustre)

Click any image to view in a slideshow.

Partners

  • Parker Ranch
  • Kahuā Ranch
  • Makani Ua Ranch
  • Ponoholo Ranch
  • Kamehameha Schools
  • Queen Emma Land Company
  • Laupāhoehoe Nui, LLC
  • Hawaiʻi Department of Land and Natural Resources
  • Hawaiʻi Department of Hawaiian Home Lands
  • Hawaiʻi County Department of Water Supply
  • The Nature Conservancy
  • The Kohala Center

Our Logo

The Kohala Watershed Partnership’s logo features loulu, native palm trees with fan-shaped leaves. Two endangered species of loulu are found on Kohala, including Pritchardia lanigera and Pritchardia gordonii. The latter was recently identified and is only found on Kohala. The loulu are an example of the unique native species that are essential to our watershed forests.


Kohala Watershed Partnership Logo

Management Priorities

The Kohala Watershed Partnership’s primary management goals are to:

  • Protect water resources
  • Protect and restore native watershed forest
  • Control feral animals and invasive plants

KWP works towards these goals through activities such as fencing, feral animal removal, invasive plant control, outplanting native plants, monitoring, and community outreach.

Collecting pilo seeds
Collecting pilo seeds
Forest recovery after fence installation (PC_ TKC)
Forest recovery after fence installation (PC_ TKC)
Staff and volunteers building fence
Staff and volunteers building fence
Staff and volunteers outplanting ʻōhiʻa
Staff and volunteers outplanting ʻōhiʻa

Click any image to view in a slideshow.

Ecosystem Highlights

The Kohala watershed includes about 67,000 acres of forest and grasslands on the windward and leeward slopes of Kohala Mountain. It is rich in natural and cultural resources, unique ecosystems, and rare and endangered plants and animals. The windward slope is dominated by wet and mesic lowland and montane forests and shrublands. Whereas, the leeward slope is characterized by montane wet forest with an abrupt transition to pasture at ma uka fencelines. Within the forest, montane bogs are found on poorly drained flat areas at high elevations, and the cliffs of windward valleys are vegetated with shrubs and trees. As a result of this range, the Kohala watershed supports over 155 known native plants and animals, some of which can be found nowhere else. 

The last known member of the tree snail family Achatinellidae on Hawaiʻi Island, Partulina physa, can still be found on Kohala but is on the brink of extinction. The Kohala Watershed Partnership along with some of its partners, the Division of Forestry and Wildlife, Parker Ranch, and Ponoholo Ranch, are working to ensure their survival. 

Native land snails are significant in Hawaiian culture. Some of the many recorded names for them are kāhuli and pūpūkanioe. In the moʻolelo kaʻao (legend) of Laukaʻieʻie written by Moses Manu from 1894 to 1895 in Hawaiian newspapers, the forest goddess Laukaʻieʻie learns the following mele (song, chant) from a pūpūhinihiniʻula (a type of land snail) at her mountain home on Kohala:

Kāhuli aku,
Kāhuli mai,
Kāhuli lei ʻula,
Lei ʻākōlea.
Kōlea, kōlea,
Kiʻi i ka wai, 
Wai ʻākōlea,
Wai ʻākōlea.

Turn that way,
Turn this way,
Land snail wreathed in red,
Garland of the ʻākōlea.
Plover, plover,
Fetch the water, 
Water from the ʻākōlea,
Water from the ʻākōlea.

Montane wet forest on leeward Kohala
Montane wet forest on leeward Kohala
Pūpūkanioe (Partulina physa) on ʻōhiʻa
Pūpūkanioe (Partulina physa) on ʻōhiʻa
Stream flowing through dry forest on leeward Kohala
Sunrise over wet montane forest and shrubland on windward Kohala

Click any image to view in a slideshow.

Top Threats

Some of the main threats to Kohala’s watershed are hooved animals such as pigs, invasive plants such as kāhili ginger, and diseases such as Rapid ʻŌhiʻa Death. 

Invasive kāhili ginger (Hedychium gardnerianum)
Invasive kāhili ginger (Hedychium gardnerianum)
Pig impact on forest understory
Pig impact on forest understory
Pig impact outside of fence
Pig impact outside of fence
Rapid ʻŌhiʻa Death outbreak (PC_ BIISC)
Rapid ʻŌhiʻa Death outbreak (PC_ BIISC)

Click any image to view in a slideshow.

KWP Area

KWP Priority Projects Map
KWP Priority Projects, June 2024
KWP Landownership Map
KWP Landownership, April 2023

Click any image to expand.

How You Can Help

Please contact the Kohala Watershed Partnership Coordinator if you are interested in learning more, getting involved, or supporting KWP with a donation using the contact information below.

News, Updates, Job/Volunteer Openings:

The Kohala Watershed Partnership is a project with the Pacific Cooperative Studies Unit at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa. Please visit www.rcuh.com/work/careers to look for job openings with KWP.

Media Gallery

Hawaiʻi bog violet (Viola maviensis)
Hawaiʻi bog violet (Viola maviensis)
Helicopter flying over leeward Kohala
Helicopter flying over leeward Kohala
ʻIeʻie (Freycinetia arborea)
ʻIeʻie (Freycinetia arborea)
Kāmakahala flowers and leaves
Kāmakahala flowers and leaves
Kāmakahala flowers and leaves
Kāmakahala flowers and leaves
Kaumuokaleiho_ohie, summit hill of Kohala
Kaumuokaleiho_ohie, summit hill of Kohala
Nā Pali Hulaʻana, windward coastal sea cliffs
Nā Pali Hulaʻana, windward coastal sea cliffs
Nananana makakiʻi (Theridion grallator _ PC_ NARS)
Nananana makakiʻi (Theridion grallator _ PC_ NARS)
Outplanted loulu (Pritchardia lanigera) seedling
Outplanted loulu (Pritchardia lanigera) seedling
Pinapinao on ʻōhiʻa
Pinapinao on ʻōhiʻa
Rainbow over forest restoration area on leeward Kohala
Rainbow over forest restoration area on leeward Kohala
Surveying for land snails
Surveying for land snails
Waterfall in montane wet forest on windward Kohala
Waterfall in montane wet forest on windward Kohala
Watering outplantings after a volunteer day
Watering outplantings after a volunteer day
Windward valley
Windward valley

Click any image to view in a slideshow.

Resources:

  • Kohala Mountain Watershed Management Plan: https://www.kohalacenter.org/docs/resources/kwp/KWP_Management_Plan_2007.pdf
  • Puʻu o ʻUmi Natural Area Reserve Cultural Study: https://dlnr.hawaii.gov/ecosystems/files/2013/07/HiNars80-Puuoumi-_c_11.pdf 

Contact Information

Mahina Patterson
Coordinator
Kohala Watershed Partnership
pohaip@hawaii.edu
808-289-2903

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