Detainment bunds trial expands to the South
ENVIRONMENT: Project keeps sediment out of waterways, Shawn McAvinue writes.
A project being carried out by a Rotorua man and trialling detainment bunds to remove phosphorus and sediment from stormwater on farms is set to come to the South.
Phosphorus Mitigation Project Inc project manager John Paterson, speaking at the field day of Southland Ballance Farm Environment Awards supreme winner Kevin Hall in Waimahaka, said his project involved a group of farmers wanting to be proactive about removing contaminants, such as phosphorus and sediment, from stormwater.
Paterson, who now lives in Rotorua but was born and raised in East Chatton, north of Gore, said the project was “a wonderful opportunity to intercept and strip out” some of the phosphorus and sediment from stormwater before it left a farm.
The incorporated society launched its first research project — a “master’s thesis” on stormwater containment, led by Massey University — about six years ago.
The research had shown “good gains” on the removal of phosphorus and sediment from stormwater.
“We can take out 60 per cent of phosphorus and sediment that would normally have rushed off into the waterways.”
About 30 detainment bunds were being trialled in “free draining soils” in Rotorua.
The group recently received funding to take its trial nationwide, including to Otago and Southland.
“Our focus now is to go to different soil types.”
He expected the bunds to perform differently on heavier soil types.
An aim of the group was to target capturing significant volumes of water on pasture without affecting the productivity of a farm.
We can take out 60 per cent of phosphorus and sediment that would normally have rushed off into the waterways. — John Paterson, Phosphorus Mitigation Project