Mou Waho is a 120-hectare island in Lake WÃÂnaka, New Zealand. It is around the same size as the nearby Mou Tapu, these two islands being the largest in the lake. The island contains a small recursive lake, called Arethusa Pool: a glacial-scoured lake formed by the most recent ice age on an island, in a lake on an island.
Buff weka thrive on the island are predators of much of the native wildlife including mountain stone wÃÂtÃÂ, cave wÃÂtÃÂ, and Southern Alps geckos. For this reason students of the local Mount Aspiring College built 40 small wooden motels for these animals to safely live in.
The island was formerly variously known as Pigeon Island (therefore confused with its namesake on nearby Lake Wakatipu) and Manuka Island. It was officially renamed Harwich Island in 1925 in honour of the Royal Navy's Harwich Force but the name did not gain wide acceptance and was renamed Mou Waho in 1988 after documents from the 1920s were found attesting to the original te reo MÃÂori name.