Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Saiko Lake

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Location
  
Yamanashi Prefecture

Basin countries
  
Japan

Max. depth
  
71.7 m (235 ft)

Surface elevation
  
900 m

Primary inflows
  
none

Surface area
  
2.1 km (0.81 sq mi)

Area
  
210 ha

Shore length
  
9.85 km

Saiko Lake httpsstatictrip101comparagraphmediapicture

Similar
  
Lake Shōji, Lake Kawaguchi, Fuji Five Lakes, Lake Yamanaka, Kawaguchiko Station

Lake Saiko (西湖, Saiko) is the one of the Fuji Five Lakes and located in southern Yamanashi Prefecture near Mount Fuji, Japan.

Map of Saiko Lake, Saiko, Fujikawaguchiko, Minamitsuru District, Yamanashi Prefecture 401-0332, Japan

It is the fourth of the Fuji Five Lakes in terms of surface area, and second deepest, with a maximum water depth of 71.1 metres (233 ft). Its surface elevation of 900 metres (3,000 ft) is the same as for Lake Motosu and Lake Shōji, confirming that these three lakes were originally a single lake, which was divided by an enormous lava flow from Mount Fuji during an eruption from 864 to 868 AD. The remnants of the lava flow are now under the Aokigahara Jukai Forest, and there is evidence to indicate that these three lakes remain connected by underground waterways.

The lake is within the borders of the Fuji-Hakone-Izu National Park.

Saiko has no natural drainage, but an artificial channel now connects it to Lake Kawaguchi. As with the other Fuji Five Lakes, the area is a popular resort, with many lakeside hotels, windsurfing facilities, camp sites, and excursion boats. Japanese crucian carp, wakasagi and Kunimasu were introduced to the lake in the Meiji period, and sports fishing is also popular.

However, Kunimasu, which had been introduced to a number of lakes in Japan in the Taishō period were believed to have died out and become extinct, with the last reported sighting in 1935, until rediscovered in Lake Sai in 2010.

West Lake in Hangzhou, China, is written with the same kanji as Lake Sai.

References

Saiko Lake Wikipedia