The Northland Age

Waterways challenges

- Andrew McGiven

New Zealanders value biodiversi­ty, but we’re struggling with a plethora of issues affecting our waterway flora and fauna.

In many cases we’re trying to work out how we can undo more than 100 years of land use change, town sewage discharges and impacts from introduced sports, pest fish and wildfowl.

A recent internatio­nal book on trout has a chapter by Niwa scientists documentin­g the impact brown trout have on our native fish. They’re our most common exotic freshwater fish, and according to the authors the science shows brown trout can eat their way through native fish, such as whitebait, ko¯aro and glaxias at an amazing rate, and have significan­t deleteriou­s effects on native biodiversi­ty.

They’ve been called the stoat of our waterways. Native galaxias were plentiful in streams without brown trout, but in neighbouri­ng waterways with brown trout they had been decimated, irrespecti­ve of the land use around the waterways.

Brown trout are linked to the extinction of the New Zealand grayling, the only native fish species known to have gone extinct since European arrival.

Another problem introduced fish is koi carp, found in the Waikato in 1983, with other introducti­ons elsewhere for coarse fishing. The pest is widespread in Auckland and Waikato waterways, is spreading into Northland and has been found in isolated places in Whanganui, Hawke's Bay and Wellington.

These noxious fish feed by stirring up the bottom of ponds, lakes and rivers. They feed like a vacuum cleaner in a very destructiv­e way, sucking up everything and blowing out what they don’t want. Aquatic plants are uprooted and are unlikely to reestablis­h, and vast amounts of sediment are dislodged.

Koi carp cause habitat loss for native plants, fish and invertebra­tes.

E. coli contaminat­ion of waterways can come from farming, urban discharges and from wild fowl. High levels of E. coli in Otago waterways recently have been attributed to water fowl. Over summer more than 50 Auckland beaches had “Do not swim” notices due to contaminat­ion from city wastewater.

Improving water quality is something we need to do as an entire community. It won’t work if one sector simply blames another while ignoring some of the problems they are also responsibl­e for.

None of these problems have easy answers, and will take time and money to fix. Angling advocates are vocal about the need to maintain water quality, but I don’t think they acknowledg­e the negative impact sport has on our native fish.

The farming sector is working hard on its impacts. There have been some outstandin­g results in water quality improvemen­t, especially in the Horizons catchments, that are essentiall­y down to farmers being engaged and taking action.

It has not been the result of broad brush, one-size-fits-all rules. How much better would these improvemen­ts have been if everyone, including F&G, were part of the solution?

"Angling advocates are vocal about the need to maintain water quality, but I don’t think they acknowledg­e the negative impact sport has on our native fish. "

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