Before European contact By 1750, Kawainui had been developed by the
native Hawaiians into a
fishpond used for food. Common fish included
mullet,
awa, and
oʻopu. Irrigated
loʻi kalo around the edges of the fishpond, as well as nearby patches of dryland
kalo,
banana,
sugarcane, and
sweet potato, served as an additional food source. There were also at least three significant
heiau built around the fishpond, including
Ulupō. Some evidence suggests that the Hawaiians also improved the channel connecting Kawainui to Kaʻelepulu.
After European contact In 1778,
James Cook arrived in Hawaii, marking
the first contact between Hawaiians and Europeans. European arrivals carried diseases, including
measles,
smallpox, and
influenza, to which the native Hawaiians had no prior exposure and no
immunity; the total population of Hawaiians dropped from roughly 300,000 to 50,000 within 50 years. This made large-scale work such as maintenance of fishponds impossible, causing Kawainui Fishpond and the surrounding agricultural area to become unused and overgrown. In 1848, the
Great Māhele and the growing economic importance of
Honolulu drove much of the
native Hawaiian population away from Kawainui and the surrounding area. During
World War II, Kawainui was used as a training area by the
United States Armed Forces, which leased it from
Kaneohe Ranch. In the 1950s, the
Honolulu Construction and Dredging Company ran a
rock crusher along one end of the marsh. The
City and County of Honolulu subsequently leased that area and used it as a site to
burn trash until 1962. In 1956, Kaneohe Ranch pumped water out of Kawainui until the
water table dropped by almost four feet, making the area more usable for
grazing as part of a
land reclamation process that was discontinued in 1965. The
Hawaii State Board of Geographic Names officially designated Kawainui a marsh in 1982. In the early 1900s, it had been inaccurately described as a
swamp.
In the 2000s In February 2005, Kawainui was designated a
Ramsar Wetland with site number 1460. As of 2019, a mass of
peat about four feet thick was covering much of Kawainui. Trees were beginning to grow in it, and
papyrus had been seen growing as well. Multiple
nonprofit organizations are working to
restore areas of the fishpond through traditional practices. == Wildlife ==