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Rangataiki

The Rangitaiki catchment covers an area of around 3,005 sq km and the river starts its journey from the Ahimanawa Ranges before traveling through broad flat pumice dominated geology used for pastoral agriculture and pine plantations. As the river travels north-east through the Kaingaroa Forest it is dominated to the east by the Ikuwhenua Ranges in Te Urewera National Park before emerging on the Galatea flood plain, which is covered by dairy farms.

 

The list of who's involved, and the actions and/or stories reported for this catchment come from the groups that have shared their efforts through the national Healthy Waterways register. You can add your group's actions to improve the health of waterways in this catchment by using the link to the register at the bottom of this page.

The data and stories shown in this topic are sourced from the Healthy Waterways register and are not independently validated by the LAWA project. The information in the register come from councils, industry organisations, and catchment groups. The information may be incomplete and may not necessarily reflect the views of LAWA partner agencies. The topic is designed to showcase actions being taken that could provide inspiration and encouragement to others and help with our future understanding of which actions makes the most difference to the health of waterways depending on the catchment context.

Catchment characteristics

Catchment size 297,644 hectares
Wetlands 918 hectares
Length of waterways 4,456 km
Erosion Susceptibility 20.8%
Land use

Discover who’s doing the mahi

Select an action and explore the data from Healthy Waterways

  • Wetland protection

    Explore the results of the hard work being done

    Actions

See how actions are supporting water quality

  • Is it making a difference?

    Explore results from river, lakes and groundwater quality, including estuaries.

    The science