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Award thanks to Eastern Bay of Plenty farmers

Award thanks to Eastern Bay of Plenty farmers

30 November 2015

The Nukuhou River has won the Bay of Plenty’s most-improved river title for 2015.

The award, presented to Bay of Plenty Regional Council chair Doug Leeder at a ceremony in Wellington on Thursday as part of the Morgan Foundation’s annual River Awards, is a tribute to landowners’ efforts in the eastern catchment.

“It recognises the hard work landowners have done to protect the river over the past several years,” Council eastern catchments manager Simon Stokes says.

The most improved rivers were determined by the trend decline in dissolved inorganic nitrogen (DIN). The Nukuhou River has recorded a 3.4 percent decline in DIN since 2005, which continues a steady trend decline that has been evident since 1995.

Landowners have installed bridges and culverts for stock crossings, riparian fencing and planting and upgraded on-farm effluent management systems, and these activities are likely contributors to the trend decline in DIN in the catchment.

The regional council became involved about 10 years ago, providing technical expertise and financial support at the landowners’ request. Since then farmers have installed another 49km of riparian fencing, built six bridges to allow stock to cross the river without walking through the water, upgraded stock races to avoid run-off going directly into the streams, retired and planted a further 333ha of steep land, and planted 48,000 native plants, mostly on riparian margins.

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Further work, such as the clearing of unstable trees and stream bank battering, grassing and planting has been carried out to reduce the sediment load in the river.

“The Ōhiwa Harbour Implementation Forum and Ōhiwa Harbour Strategy Care Group have also worked closely with council and have played a huge part in improving the river,” Simon says.

“The forum has done a fantastic job overseeing river projects and monitoring council’s work with landowners to ensure the (Ōhiwa Harbour) strategy delivers for the environment.”

Work to protect and improve the Nukuhou River continues, with the regional council working with farmers to develop and use nutrient management plans to identify ways to address the more diffuse nutrient leaching sources from animal urine and fertiliser use.

The Nukuhou River is the biggest tributary of Ōhiwa Harbour, a place of significant ecological importance that is highly valued by locals and visitors. The river catchment is very small, at 100sq km, and most of it is in agriculture of one sort or another. There are 16 dairy farms, eight drystock farms and some small operations. This means there is huge pressure on the water quality of the river.

The regional council consented dairy effluent discharges following the adoption of the Resource Management Act in the early 1990s. It inspects all dairy sheds regularly, either annually or every three years depending on the type of effluent system and each farm’s history of compliance.

Compliance levels across farms in the Bay of Plenty have generally improved over the past five years.

ENDS

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