More than just a pretty lake — this is a working ecosystem that filters stormwater, prevents flooding, and supports dozens of native species in an increasingly urban landscape.
Lake Pakenham isn't a natural lake in the traditional sense — it's a constructed urban wetland, designed to work with the natural landscape to manage stormwater from surrounding residential and commercial areas. Here's the cycle:
Rain falling on roofs, roads, and driveways across surrounding suburbs flows into the drainage network and enters the lake system through inlets on the northern and western edges.
As water slows in the shallow entry zone, heavier particles — sand, grit, litter — settle to the bottom. Gross pollutant traps at the inlets catch larger debris before it enters the lake.
Reed beds and aquatic plants absorb dissolved nutrients (nitrogen, phosphorus) that would otherwise cause algal blooms downstream. This is the wetland's most important function.
During heavy rain, the lake acts as a detention basin — storing water temporarily and releasing it slowly through the outlet. Without this, downstream creeks and properties would flood more frequently and more severely.
Filtered water leaves through the southern outlet and flows into the broader Cardinia Creek catchment, eventually reaching Western Port Bay. The water leaving the lake is significantly cleaner than what entered.
Dense plantings of Common Reed, Cumbungi (Typha), and sedges along the shoreline. These provide nesting habitat for moorhens and swamphens, shelter for frogs, and root systems that stabilise the banks against erosion.
Key species: Common Reed, Cumbungi, Carex sedges, Water Ribbons
The deeper central zone (1-2 m) supports submerged aquatic plants that oxygenate the water. Fish, eels, and turtles use this zone. Cormorants and ducks forage across the surface.
Key species: Ribbonweed, Water Milfoil, Duckweed (seasonal)
The mown and semi-managed grass areas around the lake support ground-nesting birds (Masked Lapwings) and provide foraging habitat for Wood Ducks, magpies, and rosellas. Native Kangaroo Grass patches are being restored.
Key species: Kangaroo Grass, Wallaby Grass, native daisies
The north-western tree line of mature eucalypts and planted indigenous trees provides canopy habitat for lorikeets, rosellas, and nesting raptors. Fallen timber is left in place for insects, reptiles, and fungi — it's not untidy, it's habitat.
Key species: Swamp Gum, Manna Gum, Blackwood, Silver Wattle
Cardinia Shire Council and the Friends of the Lake have planted over 15,000 indigenous plants since the revegetation program began. Volunteer planting days happen quarterly — see events.
Melbourne Water conducts regular sampling for pH, turbidity, dissolved oxygen, and nutrient levels. Data is used to assess the wetland's filtration performance and guide maintenance schedules.
Annual bird and frog surveys track population trends. The bird watching group contributes citizen science data that feeds into the Atlas of Living Australia database.