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Modelling E'coli and Campylobacter in a Pastoral Catchment

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Direct deposition and dairy shed waste discharges to streams ... Shedding rate at high end (1010/cow/day) required to get concentrations in stream high enough ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Modelling E'coli and Campylobacter in a Pastoral Catchment


1
Modelling E.coli and Campylobacter in a Pastoral
Catchment
  • Sandy Elliott

2
Aim of the research
  • Develop a detailed, mechanistic, dynamic model of
    E. coli and Campylobacter for a dairy catchment
    (Toenepi)
  • Include host, deposition, transport into streams,
    transport in streams
  • Exploratory, ambitious

3
Questions for modellers
  • Do we understand how microbes are generated and
    transported in the environment?
  • Can we predict the sources, pathways, and
    concentrations?
  • How effective are mitigations?
  • How important are farm sources overall?

4
Sources and transport into streams
From Richard Muirhead, Agresearch, 2008
5
Stream processes
6
Stream network
7
Rainfall-runoff model
8
Land microbial loss
Excretion onto land
Direct deposition and dairy shed waste discharges
to streams
Irrigation
Overland flow
Wash-off
Cow pats
Infiltration
Decay
Soil mobile water
Drain flow losses
Input to stream reach
Decay and sorption
Loss to immobile water and groundwater
9
Stream microbial transport
10
Cow infection
Cross-infection
Infected
Un-Infected
Recovery
Infection from stream water
Stream water
11
Dose-response relation
12
Toenepi application
  • Waikato Focus Catchment
  • Campylobacter and E. coli monitoring data
    available, storms and baseflow
  • Good spatial data already available
  • Default model parameters from literature, best
    judgement

13
Model subcatchments and reaches
14
Soils
15
Farms, land units
16
Parameters
17
More parameters
18
and more parameters
19
Some early example results
20
Flows
21
Campylobacter time-series
22
E. Coli time-series
23
Toenepi Storm DataE. coli, Flow , Turbidity and
Campylobacter
23
24
Flood time series(Campylobacter, 18 Sept 2005)
25
Stock removed.
26
Some early findings for Campy
  • Difficulty predicting concentration time-series
  • Shedding rate at high end (1010/cow/day) required
    to get concentrations in stream high enough
  • Need ongoing direct inputs to streams to get
    concentrations high enough
  • These are accompanied by large diurnal
    concentration swings
  • Storm concentration predictions too low. Need to
    increase sources (washoff coefficient, decay,
    shedding)
  • Large parameter uncertainty for sensitive
    parameters
  • Cows remain mostly infected, even in headwaters,
    for low median infective dose (100).
    Self-perpetuating system.

27
Information gaps
  • Role of subsurface flow, soil loss
  • Role of other animals
  • Where does the baseflow and stormflow
    contribution come from!

28
Some possible experiments
  • Stock removal
  • Intensive sampling during a day
  • Artificial flow release into Toenepi stream,
    including inert solutes
  • Confirm sources in streams during baseflow by
    tracking and forensics
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