Environmental Reporting, Ministry for the Environment and Statistics New Zealand
Position Name
Analyst
Contact Info
Contact
Address
Address
Delivery Point
23 Kate Sheppard Place, PO Box 10362
City
Wellington 6143
Country
New Zealand
Electronic Mail Address
Environmental.Reporting@mfe.govt.nz
Role
Role Code
distributor
Date Stamp
Date
2016-01-21
Metadata Standard Name
ANZLIC Metadata Profile: An Australian/New Zealand Profile of AS/NZS ISO 19115:2005, Geographic information - Metadata
Metadata Standard Version
1.1
Reference System Info
Reference System
Reference System Identifier
Identifier
Code
2193
Identification Info
Data Identification
Citation
Citation
Title
Ammoniacal nitrogen, 2009–2013
Date
Abstract
"Small amounts of nitrogen are a natural component of healthy rivers. Nitrogen in rivers can vary due to differences in land use, climate, elevation, and geology. Nitrogen is transferred from land to water and is cycled through different forms, which can have different effects. Moderate concentrations of nitrate can cause weeds and algae to grow too fast. High concentrations of ammoniacal and nitrate nitrogen can be toxic to fish and other aquatic animals. This dataset relates to the ""Geographic pattern of nitrogen in river water"" measure on the Environmental Indicators, Te taiao Aotearoa website. "
Status
Progress Code
completed
Point Of Contact
Responsible Party
Organisation Name
Environmental Reporting, Ministry for the Environment and Statistics New Zealand
Source: National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research; regional councils
Method: "Nitrogen is measured in laboratories. Samples are collected from the river at fixed locations once a month, and sent to a laboratory for chemical analysis. Estimates of median nitrogen across New Zealand is based on measurements from the 16 regional councils (277, 510, and 288 river sites for total nitrogen, nitrate nitrogen, and ammoniacal nitrogen respectively), and 77 sites along 35 major rivers measured by the National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research (NIWA). Nitrogen occurs as several forms in the environment. The following forms are reported: – Total Nitrogen (TN) is the sum of all nitrogen found in a river water sample, including organic nitrogen from plant tissue. – Nitrate is highly soluble (dissolves in water) and so can readily be used by plants and algae to help them grow. Because of this solubility it can also leach through soils very easily, particularly where soils are sandy or after heavy rainfall (McDowell et al 2008). Sources include excessive application of inorganic fertilizer, stock urine, septic tanks and leaking sewage systems. It is measured and reported as the elemental nitrogen equivalent, described as nitrate–nitrogen (NO3–N). – Ammoniacal nitrogen can be toxic at moderate to high concentrations. Elevated quantities in waterways are primarily from direct pollutant discharges such as untreated effluent. We are unable to reliably estimate trends in ammonia concentration prior to 1995 due to a subsequent change in laboratory procedures. Ammoniacal nitrogen includes readily available forms of ammonia and ammonium. These are collectively reported as the elemental nitrogen equivalent; ammoniacal nitrogen (NH4–N). This is inferred from the predominant land cover in a catchment and the surrounding landscape characteristics, such as, climate, elevation, and geology. The accuracy of the data source is of medium quality.
Reference: McDowell, RW, Houlbrooke, DJ, Muirhead, RW, Müller, K, Shepherd, M, & Cuttle, SP (2008). Grazed pastures and surface water quality. New York: Nova Science Publishers."
Metadata Constraints
Legal Constraints
Use Limitation
Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 New Zealand by Ministry for the Environment
Access Constraints
Restriction Code
license
Metadata Constraints
Legal Constraints
Use Limitation
Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 New Zealand by Ministry for the Environment