• NIWA - Metadata Catalogue
  •  
  •  
  •  

  Contaminants in kai – Arowhenua rohe

The reports describes: 1. The methods of sampling & analyses used based upon questionnaires completed by iwi members. 2. Results for bioaccumulative contaminants, e.g. DDTs, PCBs, heavy metals, arsenic. 3. A discussion of the significance of these results to respective Iwi. 4. Recommendations for future research. Questionnaires were used to survey Arowhenua iwi members about their past and present consumption rates of traditional kai species. Fish and/or shellfish (including longfin or shortfin eel, brown trout, koura, pipi, mussel and flounder) and watercress samples were gathered from multiple important harvesting sites in the different regions, and tested to assess their bioaccumulative contaminant levels. Hair samples were also collected from Arowhenua participants to assess possible exposure to mercury, a highly accumulative contaminant. Analytical data for fish, shellfish and sediment samples was collected for a range of organochlorine compounds, including DDT (historically used as a pesticide), chlordane (a pesticide) and dieldrin (an insecticide), arsenic (As),and heavy metals e.g. cadmium (Cd), chromium (Cr), copper (Cu), lead (Pb), mercury (Hg), nickel (Ni) and zinc (Zn). Eel and/or trout fillets were also analysed for selected polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs). Watercress was analysed for heavy metals and arsenic only. High total DDT (ΣDDT) concentrations were recorded in eel fillet from Winchester, Ohapi Creek and Doncaster in Arowhenua rohe. The concentrations of ΣDDT in trout and flounder were generally much lower than for eels. Other organochlorine pesticides were either below the limits of detection, or measured in much lower concentrations than any of the DDT congeners. Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) were analysed in eels from Arowhenua rohe. The most elevated levels of PCBs were found at Doncaster and Winchester. The concentrations of mercury were generally highest in eel fillet whereas arsenic was only present in flounder and trout. The average concentration of mercury in the Arowhenua hair samples was similar to levels found in the study reference group. The low number of Arowhenua responders in this study meant we couldn’t analyse potential links with consumption of wild kai. The results show that if kai was gathered randomly across all sites throughout the Arowhenua rohe, then there is no significant risk to members of Arowhenua from eating eels, trout, flounder or watercress. If kai was mostly gathered at the more contaminated sites then a significant risk exists when eating eel. A number of potential “hotspots” (i.e., area of increased risk) were identified for Arowhenua rohe. From the risk assessment, consumption of eel from Doncaster, Ohapi Creek or Winchester should be less than once per month. Furthermore, consumption should also be limited for eel harvested from Waihi River, Temuka, Opihi River upstream and below Pleasant Point to 1- 4 meals/month. With respect to trout, a degree of caution should be exercised when consuming individuals from Opihi River mouth, Temuka or Orari Ohapi. Flounder from Washdyke Lagoon and Orari Ohapi also represent a risk, with allowable consumption limits of 1-4 meals/month. Watercress consumption risk was highest when harvested from the Opihi River (below Pleasant Point site), with consumption limits of 2.7 meals/month.
 
Citation proposal
Chris Hickey (NIWA) - Michael Stewart (Streamline Environmental Ltd) - Ngaire Phillips (Streamline Environmental Ltd). . https://dc.niwa.co.nz:/niwa_dc/srv/api/records/086910ac-25f5-76da-cca6-316fb925ff35
 

Simple

Date ( Creation )
2015-06-15T00:43:00
Date ( Revision )
2015-06-15T00:43:00
Purpose
The aim of this study was to quantify the risk to Arowhenua iwi members by consuming wild kai gathered from their respective rohe (or regions), e.g. South Canterbury. 
Credit
Authors: Ngaire Phillips, Mike Stewart, Greg Olsen, Chris Hickey – NIWA Hamilton, Gail Tipa – Tipa & Associates. The research was funded by the Health Research Council of New Zealand, Contract HRC/207. We want to thank Lindsay Hawke and Julian Sykes (NIWA Christchurch) and Te Runanga o Arowhenua members for their participation in the research and for help with field sampling. 
Status
Completed  

  Author

NIWA  

  Point of contact

NIWA  

  Author

Streamline Environmental Ltd  

  Author

Streamline Environmental Ltd  

  Point of contact

NIWA  
Spatial representation type
Vector  
Topic category
  • Biota
  • Environment
  • Health
Description
South Canterbury-Arowhenua Rohe 
N
S
E
W


TimePeriod
2009-09-01T00:00:002011-08-16T00:00:00 
  • Te Runanga o Arowhenua, South Canterbury, biota, bioaccummulative contaminants, organochlorine pesticides, DDT, arsenic, mercury, heavy metals, risk assessment
NIWA Project Codes
  • HRC08201
Use limitation
Only a small number of people completed the kai consumption questionnaire and only a low number of larger species (i.e., eel and trout) were collected from some sites, therefore, caution must be taken when applying consumption limits on a site by site basis. It should also be noted that only a small amount of the total arsenic detected in the kai samples is likely to be toxic. While our calculations of risk take this into account, without further study we cannot know this amount exactly. Therefore, the risk calculations where arsenic is the main contaminant of concern should be viewed with caution. 
Other constraints
Data held and available from Te Runanga o Arowhenua, Temuka. 
Use limitation
Data may be obtained from Te Runanga o Arowhenua or point of contact. 
Classification
Restricted  
Language
English  
OnLine resource

Point of truth URL of this metadata record

mdb:MD_Metadata

Metadata identifier
086910ac-25f5-76da-cca6-316fb925ff35

Language
English  
Character encoding
UTF8  

  Custodian

NIWA National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research  
301 Evans Bay Parade
Hataitai
Wellington
6021
New Zealand
 
Resource scope
Dataset  
Date info ( Creation )
2015-06-18T08:27:12
Title
ISO 19115-3 
 
 

    Overviews

  Provided by

  Share on social sites

         

  Views

  • Simple
  • Full
  • XML
086910ac-25f5-76da-cca6-316fb925ff35   Access to the portal Read here the full details and access to the data.

  Associated resources

Not available


  •  
  •