Estimating nitrate-nitrogen leaching rates under rural land uses in Canterbury
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Date
2010-09
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Report
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Abstract
Over the last two decades, agricultural production in the region has grown as a result of the increasing
use of inputs, such as fertilisers, supplementary feeds and irrigation water, accompanied by the
conversion of plantation forests and areas of extensive sheep and beef grazing into dairy farms.
At the same time, there is increasing evidence that Canterbury’s freshwater resources are becoming
degraded as a result of increasing inputs of nutrients, bacteria and sediment from these changing land
uses (ECan 2008). If these land use changes continue under current management practices,
modelling studies suggest that nitrate-N concentrations in shallow groundwater are likely to continue
increasing in the future (Di & Cameron 2002; Bidwell et. al. 2009). Faced with this pressure on the
region’s water resources, Environment Canterbury is reviewing its approach to managing the
cumulative effects of land use, especially diffuse nutrient inputs, on water quality.
Initially, Environment Canterbury undertook a preliminary study to examine the effects of agricultural
land uses on water quality between the Rakaia and Waimakariri rivers (Di & Cameron 2004). More
recently, the Canterbury Mayoral Forum (2009) commissioned modelling at a regional scale to assess
the potential changes to water quality as a result of concern over the consequences of intensifying
agricultural land uses in the region (Bidwell et. al. 2009 ).
The Proposed Natural Resources Regional Plan set measurable water quality objectives for surface
waters and groundwaters addresses point source discharges and sets limits for nutrient losses from
irrigated properties in inland areas of Canterbury. However, the plan did not include provisions to
adequately address the cumulative effects of nutrient loads from intensifying land uses and multiple
point-source discharges.
To remedy this problem, Bidwell (2008 & 2009) proposed an allocation approach, based on a “first in
first served” basis to address the effects of nitrate-N discharges on shallow groundwater in relation to
drinking water quality. A consent application to use water for irrigation would be assessed against
existing land uses within a predetermined distance from the property where the proposed activity was
going to take place. The discharge of nitrate-N from the proposed activity would be assessed in
combination with the estimated nitrate-N leaching from land uses within the “area of interest.”
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