Floating wetland platforms - captures excess nutrient from a water body and provide habitats for native crayfish - image from Bex Eivers
Lake Tarawera meteorological station - provide us necessary information for computer modelling - image from Chris McBride
Secchi disc - a simple yet effective way to assess water clarity - image from Eloise Brown
Weed chopper - remove excess weeds with nutrient within
Zeolite application - captures excess nutrient in water body by flocculation - image from Dr. Deniz Özkundakci
Zeolite application - image from Dr. Deniz Özkundakci
Zeolite application - image from Dr. Deniz Özkundakci
Lake high-frequency science buoy - provide us high-frequent physical and biological information - image from Warrick Powrie
Mesocosm - controlled experiments in near natural condition
Lake high-frequency science buoy - provide us high-frequent physical and biological information - image from Chris McBride
CTD (conductivity - temperature - density) - provide multiple sensor readings in a water body
Robotic submarine - takes sensor readings, images from a lake and ponds remotely - image from Prof. Craig Carry and his team
Controlling remote robotic submarine - image from Prof. Craig Carry and his team
Electro fishing boat - used for pest fish management and population assessment - image from Prof. Brendan Hicks
Biofish sensors - provide us three dimensional sensor reading in lakes - image from Kohji Muraoka
Detention bunds - create small dam structures in farmland to remove storm-induced nutrient runoff - image from Dylan Clark
Sediments removed from an artificial ponds at the University of Waikato Campus - image from Prof. David Hamilton
This device was installed in Lake Rotoehu to artificially disturb he lake vertical structure to oxygenate bottom sediment - image from Andee Bruere
Maintaining high-frequency science buoy - image from Chris McBride
Image from Dr. Adam Daniels