Kealia Pond National Wildlife Refuge


Kealia Pond National Wildlife Refuge is a coastal salt marsh along the south-central coast of the Hawaiian Island of Maui. The refuge is located between the towns of Kīhei and Māalaea, on both sides of North Kihei Road, Route 31. The wetland is also a bird sanctuary, home to 30 species of waterfowl, shorebirds, and migratory ducks, including the aukuu and the endangered āeo and alae kea. Kealia Pond was selected as a wildlife refuge in 1953, protecting an initial of land. The refuge joined the National Wildlife Refuge System in 1992.

Description

In the rainy winter season, high water levels enlarge the freshwater pond to more than. By spring, water levels begin dropping and by summer, the pond shrinks to half its winter size, leaving a salty residue behind: this accounts for its name, "Kealia", meaning "salt encrusted place"; Coastal salt pans once produced the mineral from seawater. The low water levels cause a 98% dieback in the tilapia population, which can produce a foul stench in the area.
Kealia was once an ancient fishpond supplied with water from the Waikapu Stream in the West Maui Mountains and Kolaloa Gulch originating from Haleakalā. Native Hawaiians may have raised awa and amaama using a system of ditches and sluice gates to let nearby fish from Māalaea Beach into the pond.
Towards the west, the area between Kealia and the town of Māalaea contains another shallow pond and mudflats that are also used by the birds during the winter and spring flooding. When the mudflats dry out during the summer, the birds move to Kealia Pond. This area was once a runway serving one of Maui's first airports, Māalaea Airport. During World War II, Kealia Pond was used for training the 2nd and 4th Marine Divisions.
The site has hosted numerous vagrant birds, most notably Garganey, Curlew Sandpiper, Marbled Godwit, American Avocet, Spotted Sandpiper, and Eared Grebe.

Boardwalk

A new boardwalk and 14-stall parking lot opened on North Kihei Road on September 8, 2009. The area encompasses the bird sanctuary next to Sugar Beach between Kīhei and Māalaea. It is open from 6 a.m. - 7 p.m. and is patrolled by private security.

Images