Catchments to estuaries

Understanding and predicting the connections between catchments and estuaries to improve the management of diffuse-source contamination.

The Catchment to Estuaries programme aims to improve our ability to predict the fate and effects of catchment diffuse-source contaminants once they reach estuaries. Key contaminants include fine sediments, nutrients, faecal microbes, heavy metals and organic chemicals. Knowing the fate of contaminants is necessary for predicting effects that may result from land use intensification, and for setting effective limits to achieve water-quality and ecosystem-health objectives. This programme focuses on the physical and geochemical processes that control transport, transformation, fate and effects of land-derived contaminants in estuaries.

Programme Leader: Dr Andrew Swales

Objectives

  • Physical processes are investigated and better understood, including how freshwater enters and mixes in estuaries and how density stratification effects contaminants and dispersal. Early indicators of eutrophication and management tools (e.g., CLUES-estuaries) to predict effects of catchment land-use, river flows, nutrient loading and estuary characteristics are developed. Sediments and optical properties of water are investigated, methods to calculate load limits to achieve estuarine targets are developed and contribute to the National Objectives Framework (NOF).
  • Biotracers (e.g., Compond Specific Stable Isotopes) are further developed and used to estimate sediment sources and sedimentation histories
  • Mangroves and saltmarshes and sedimentation in estuaries and interactions between flow and morphology is better understood.
  • Maori kaitiakitanga and planning. Implementing the Iwi Estuarine Monitoring Toolkit and developing a values-based environmental reporting system.

Research projects

Key science collaborators

  • University of Otago
  • University of Queensland
  • University of Cantabria
  • University of Waikato

Recent publications 

See a list of our recent publications

Primary NIWA Team