Email us      Site Map    Hints

Home > Environmental information > Rivers, lakes and wetlands > Learn about our lakes > Lake Taupo > How Mount Ruapehu’s eruptions affect Lake Taupo

How Mount Ruapehu’s eruptions affect Lake Taupo

Environment Waikato monitored the ash fall from Mount Ruapehu’s eruptions that settled on the bottom of Lake Taupo. As a result water quality improved – but only short-term.
Mt Ruapehu erupting

In brief

An estimated 2.3 million tonnes of ash entered the Lake from the 1995-96 eruptions.

The ash sank, carrying nutrients down to the Lake bed and trapping them there under a silted layer up to 4 mm thick.

In the short-term, water quality improved.

Ash in the Lake

Mount Ruapehu erupted in 1995 and 1996, affecting up to 100,000 people in the central North Island of New Zealand. Apart from the economic effects, the eruptions also affected the surrounding land and aquatic ecosystems.

Initially the volcanic ash and mudflows turned streams and rivers a milky colour. The large amount of ash had serious effects on stream life and also on the streams’ ultimate destination – Lake Taupo.

An estimated 2.3 million tonnes of ash entered the Lake. It sank to the Lake bottom where it formed a silted layer up to 4 mm thick, covering at least two thirds of the Lake floor.

Ash also entered the Lake from the Tongariro River. The total amount of ash from this and other rivers is unknown but it was significant.

The concentrated ash had two main effects:

  1. As the ash sank through the water column it took with it nutrients (particularly phosphorus), some suspended solids and phytoplankton (microscopic free-floating algae), stripping them from the Lake’s water.
  2. When it settled, the ash layer acted like a seal over the Lake bed, slowing up normal chemical transfers between sediments on the bottom of the Lake and the water.

The effect was like using floc to clear a swimming pool (floc groups small particles and algae together so that they settle on the bottom). The amount introduced to Lake Taupo by the eruptions was 10 times more than needed for a lake of this size.

The Lake’s water quality seemed to improve. It contained fewer nutrients and there was more oxygen available for fish at the Lake bottom.

But the improvement is likely to be short-term. In time, the ash seal on the Lake bottom will mix with the sediment underneath and the trapped nutrients will be released back into the water column again.

Volcanic eruptions are a natural hazard in the Waikato Region. Find out more about our Region's Volcanic Activity, eruptions on Mount Ruapehu and the current status of Mount Ruapehu's crater lake.

Copyright Waikato Regional Council © 1999-2007
Date Printed: 20 September 2007
Page: www.ew.govt.nz/index.asp
Environment Waikato:   Box 4010 Hamilton East   Fax 07 859 0998   Freephone 0800 800 401

www.ew.govt.nz
www.ew.govt.nz


Environment Waikato    Box 4010 Hamilton East  3247   Fax (07) 859 0998     Freephone 0800 800 401

Copyright Waikato Regional Council ©1999-2010    Conditions of Use    Contact Us