Grassroots efforts to restore Hawaiian fishponds across the state will soon benefit from high-tech sensor technology intended to make them more resilient to climate change.
The Loko Iʻa and Coastal Monitoring Project officially launched on Tuesday, will integrate modern sensor technology into everyday efforts at up to 30 fishpond restoration projects across Oahu and Maui County.
Three local organizations — Purple Mai’a Foundation, Kuaʻaina Ulu ʻAuamo, and Hohonu — teamed up for the $400,000 congressionally funded project.
The data will provide a baseline from which fishpond practitioners will be able to tailor their practices to their conditions, whether that would be focusing on shell fish, limu (seaweeds) or fish cultivation.
The early stages of the project are focused on canvassing the fishpond restoration community for their data needs, from water levels to water clarity, according to Kea’a Davis of Purple Mai’a.
Davis, the educational nonprofit’s lead product and design strategist says the project will rely heavily on collaboration with the fishpond community because the sensor data will be regularly collated and updated on a data dashboard the community can access.
That means working with Kuaʻaina Ulu ʻAuamo, a collective of Indigenous groups that includes about 40 traditional fishpond projects, to find out what data the communities need and how they would want to use it.
The sea level sensor technology was developed by Hohonu, a public-private company partially owned by the University of Hawaii, devoted to making once prohibitively expensive technology more accessible at the local level. The sensor technology has been widely used on the East Coast to help anticipate flooding events.
“These practitioners have their process for observing and caring for the places they watch over,” Davis said. “This is just another tool that fits into their tool kit.”
Fishponds, or loko i’a were once an integral facet of the traditional ahupuaa land division system, in which Native Hawaiians worked with the land from mountains to sea. There were almost 500 lakes across the archipelago before western contact, which supported entire communities of people, but were later neglected or overlooked.
Traditionally knowledge would have been passed down through generations of people who lived next to the fishponds and had a more intimate relationship with loko i’a.
Brenda Asuncion, KUA’s Hui Malama Loko I’a Coordinator says integrating sensors can accelerate caretakers and practitioners relearning of traditional fishpond maintenance.
“A lot of people who work at fishponds recognize that they are trying to relearn these environments and systems,” Asuncion said. “I think the folks that do this work recognize that they’re facing those barriers that are a result of a lack of recognition of traditional management and the importance of fishponds in our landscape.”
Because this project is congressionally funded and supported by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, it could mean a shift, Asuncion says.
“The Hawaiians had it right 400 years ago.” — Deep CEO Brian Glazer.
Hohonu CEO and UH Associate Professor Brian Glazer says the project aspires to align with the hundreds of years of knowledge behind fishpond management.
“The Hawaiians had it right 400 years ago,” Glazer said. “We have to take that understanding of what a healthy ahupuaa (watershed) looks like and take that forward, as a beacon and example.”
For now, fishpond practitioners have to factor in the effects of erratic ocean conditions and unusual weather.
Glazer says that using the sensor technology that was once “as foreign as Mars Rovers,” hyperlocal forecasting can take place and these fishponds will become a more sustainable food source.
The project is expected to be completed by the end of March when all fishponds are expected to have sensors installed.
“Hawaii Grown” is funded in part by grants from the Stupski Foundation, Ulupono Fund at the Hawaii Community Foundation and the Frost Family Foundation.