No.27 2008

Protecting our aquatic environments

Storm chasing - understanding sediment generation and transport

Water resources outlook

Analysing water quality data just got easier Timetrends

Water resources review

Multiple stressors and aquatic life

In this issue

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    Protecting our aquatic environments

    Protecting our aquatic environments
    Waikanae River (Photo: Alan Blacklock, NIWA)
    “Environmental problems in our waterways associated with land-use change, or land-use intensification, are rarely caused by a single factor,” says NIWA’s Dr Malcolm Green, leader of a research programme aimed at protecting aquatic environments.
    “Changes such as conversion of forestry to pasture, or increased irrigation take, can fundamentally affect life in our streams, rivers, lakes, and estuaries,” says Malcolm.
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    Multiple stressors and aquatic life

    Multiple stressors and aquatic life
    The field trial site. (Photo: Jeremy Piggott, University of Otago)
    How do increases in levels of nutrients and fine sediments, higher water temperatures, and reduced water flow, affect life in streams? What if these changes occur simultaneously?
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    Water resources outlook

    Water resources outlook (June–August 2008)
    Northern and southwestern North Island
    Normal or above normal soil moisture levels and river flows are likely.
    Southeastern North Island; east & southwest South Island
    Normal soil moisture levels and normal or above normal river flows are likely.
    All of the South Island
    Normal soil moisture levels and river flows are likely.
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    Storm chasing - understanding sediment generation and transport

    Storm chasing - understanding sediment generation and transport
    Sediment in the Raglan estuary following a January storm. (Photo: Sandy Elliott, NIWA)
    NIWA scientists have been out in the rain, monitoring the impact of storms on sediment erosion and transport.
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    Analysing water quality data just got easier

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    Water resources review

    Water resources review (March– May 2008)
    River flows
    March– May 2008 river flows
    River flows over the last three months were above normal in Northland and the Bay of Plenty, normal in the central North Islandand Hawke’s Bay, and below normal everywhere else.
    [Water resources information provided by NIWA field teams, regional and district councils, and hydropower companies.]