scholarly journals Vested Interests in Big Agriculture

2021 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mike Joy

Almost three decades of studying freshwaters in New Zealand has revealed to me that our lowland freshwater ecosystems are in dire straits and that there is no hint of improvement, or even a slowing of degradation. The leading cause of their demise is landuse change, specifically the rampant and extreme intensification of farming. The response of government, both central and local, has been an abject failure to limit this intensification and its resultant harm. Key to these regulatory failures by authorities charged with protecting freshwaters has been the influence at all levels of powerful agricultural industry lobby groups.

Polar Record ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 57 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patrick Flamm

Abstract While the Antarctic Treaty System intended to keep Antarctica an area of international cooperation and science free from militarisation and international conflict, the region has not been completely shielded from global power transitions, such as decolonisation and the end of the Cold War. Presently, emerging countries from Asia are increasingly willing to invest in polar infrastructure and science on the back of their growing influence in world politics. South Korea has also invested heavily in its Antarctic infrastructure and capabilities recently and has been identified as an actor with economic and political interests that are potentially challenging for the existing Antarctic order. This article first assesses the extent and performance of the growing bilateral cooperation between South Korea and one of its closest partners, New Zealand, a country with strong vested interests in the status quo order. How did the cooperation develop between these two actors with ostensibly diverging interests? This article finds that what may have been a friction–laden relationship, actually developed into a win-win partnership for both countries. The article then moves on to offer an explanation for how this productive relationship was made possible by utilising a mutual socialisation approach that explores socio-structural processes around status accommodation.


2019 ◽  
Vol 366 (8) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sophie Van Hamelsveld ◽  
Muyiwa E Adewale ◽  
Brigitta Kurenbach ◽  
William Godsoe ◽  
Jon S Harding ◽  
...  

Abstract Baseline studies are needed to identify environmental reservoirs of non-pathogenic but associating microbiota or pathogenic bacteria that are resistant to antibiotics and to inform safe use of freshwater ecosystems in urban and agricultural settings. Mesophilic bacteria and Escherichia coli were quantified and isolated from water and sediments of two rivers, one in an urban and one in an agricultural area near Christchurch, New Zealand. Resistance of E. coli to one or more of nine different antibiotics was determined. Additionally, selected strains were tested for conjugative transfer of resistances. Despite having similar concentrations of mesophilic bacteria and E. coli, the rivers differed in numbers of antibiotic-resistant E. coli isolates. Fully antibiotic-susceptible and -resistant strains coexist in the two freshwater ecosystems. This study was the first phase of antibiotic resistance profiling in an urban setting and an intensifying dairy agroecosystem. Antibiotic-resistant E. coli may pose different ingestion and contact risks than do susceptible E. coli. This difference cannot be seen in population counts alone. This is an important finding for human health assessments of freshwater systems, particularly where recreational uses occur downstream.


2011 ◽  
Vol 17 (3) ◽  
pp. 201 ◽  
Author(s):  
K M Jenkins ◽  
R T Kingsford ◽  
G P Closs ◽  
B J Wolfenden ◽  
C D Matthaei ◽  
...  

Human-forced climate change significantly threatens the world’s freshwater ecosystems, through projected changes to rainfall, temperature and sea level. We examined the threats and adaptation opportunities to climate change in a diverse selection of rivers and wetlands from Oceania (Australia, New Zealand and Pacific Islands). We found common themes, but also important regional differences. In regulated floodplain rivers in dry regions (i.e. Australia), reduced flooding projected with climate change is a veneer on current losses, but impacts ramp up by 2070. Increasing drought threatens biota as the time between floods extends. Current measures addressing water allocations and dam management can be extended to adapt to climate change, with water buy-back and environmental flows critical. Freshwater wetlands along coastal Oceania are threatened by elevated salinity as sea level rises, potentially mitigated by levee banks. In mountainous regions of New Zealand, the biodiversity of largely pristine glacial and snow melt rivers is threatened by temperature increases, particularly endemic species. Australian snow melt rivers face similar problems, compounding impacts of hydro-electric schemes. Translocation of species and control of invasive species are the main adaptations. Changes to flow regime and rising water temperatures and sea levels are the main threats of climate change on freshwater ecosystems. Besides lowering emissions, reducing impacts of water consumption and protecting or restoring connectivity and refugia are key adaptations for conservation of freshwater ecosystems. Despite these clear imperatives, policy and management has been slow to respond, even in developed regions with significant resources to tackle such complex issues.


Author(s):  
Jonathan Boston

Significant changes have been made since the late 1980s to the funding, governance, and accountability of New Zealand’s public tertiary education institutions (TEIs). The new governance framework, which was introduced by the fourth Labour government in 1990, has been the subject of numerous criticisms. According to the government’s departmental advisers on tertiary education, the new regime exposes the Crown to significant ownership risks, provides insufficient incentives for sound financial management, gives too much power to vested interests, unduly limits the government’s capacity to intervene in the wider public interest, and leaves TEIs insufficiently accountable for their use of public resources. This article examines the merits of these criticisms, and assesses the various proposals for reform.


2019 ◽  
Vol 54 (3) ◽  
pp. 551-591 ◽  
Author(s):  
Scott T. Larned ◽  
Jonathan Moores ◽  
Jenni Gadd ◽  
Brenda Baillie ◽  
Marc Schallenberg

2019 ◽  
Vol 29 (9) ◽  
pp. 1574-1586 ◽  
Author(s):  
David W. West ◽  
John R. Leathwick ◽  
Tracie L. Dean‐Speirs

1958 ◽  
Vol 1958 ◽  
pp. 101-103 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. R. Wannop

New Zealand is primarily an agricultural country. Sixty per cent of all its production, including nearly 100% of its exports, comes from farms and is produced by only 17% of the total labour force. Within the agricultural industry sheep farming is dominant. Wool provides between one-third and one-half of the total exports and lamb and mutton about one-sixth. Over 90% of the wool and lamb produced and about 50% of the mutton is exported.The prominent place that wool occupies in New Zealand’s farming strikes any visitor from Britain. The wool cheque naturally exceeds the income from other sources on the sheep stations of the Southern Alps where Merino sheep are grazed, but on lower hill farms selling cast-for-age or surplus two-tooth ewes to fat-lamb breeding farms and store lambs to hogget fatteners the wool cheque is still usually more than half the income.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amy Gault

<p><b>In New Zealand, recent policy changes require freshwater managers to take more comprehensive and integrated approaches to monitoring and maintaining ecosystem health. To attempt to prevent and reverse the adverse effects of land use change on freshwater ecosystems, management decisions need to be based upon a suite of indicators each with a strong foundation of knowledge regarding the nature of responses at a national scale. Monitoring ecosystem function in addition to structural indicators has long been suggested to provide a more accurate and holistic narrative of ecosystem health, however, it has yet to be adopted in routine bioassessment. The cotton strip assay has shown promise as a consistent, relatively cheap, and repeatable method for monitoring freshwater ecosystem function, indicating the ecological processing rates of riverine microbial communities and the organic matter processing potential of riverine environments. Numerous regional-scale studies have applied the cotton strip assay in New Zealand, but these data have yet to be explored in unison. For managers to successfully monitor, manage, and restore ecological processes in river environments, a comprehensive understanding of the proximate drivers of cotton breakdown is needed. The aim of this study is to conduct a meta-analysis of cotton strip assay data to explore the relationship between river function and other measures of ecosystem health and land-use stressors at a national scale.</b></p> <p>I collated published and unpublished cotton strip data to create a meta-dataset, with measures harmonised by deployment time and temperature for more meaningful comparisons at a national scale. I sourced additional data from national databases describing water quality and physical river classification information for more comprehensive, higher resolution analyses. I then used the meta-dataset was to investigate the nature of cotton decomposition responses along varying levels of impairment across different seasonal conditions and spatial catchment attributes. </p> <p>I used linear mixed-effects models to determine the relationships between cotton decomposition and physicochemical predictor variables, along with any additional influence attributed to underlying spatial variation across sites. Results suggest that bioavailable nutrients and water clarity are the largest drivers in cotton breakdown rates at a national scale. Water temperature and seasonal conditions emerged as likely limiting factors on microbial activity and cotton breakdown, indicating that consistent intra-seasonal monitoring is advisable. Climate and underlying geology can also be important when looking to discriminate underlying catchment variation and should be incorporated when making larger scale comparisons. Relationships with land use were found to be non-linear and likely to have too many co-varying factors enacting influence on cotton breakdown rates to be successful predictive gradients. Breakdown responses were, however, most consistent under high levels of vegetation cover, and high variability in responses in more urban and pastoral developed catchments. The assays’ sensitivity to nutrient enrichment at a national scale could aid in informing management policies with respect to nutrient limits, and the setting of natural ecosystem processing benchmarks.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patrick Flamm

© The Author(s) 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press. While the Antarctic Treaty System intended to keep Antarctica an area of international cooperation and science free from militarisation and international conflict, the region has not been completely shielded from global power transitions, such as decolonisation and the end of the Cold War. Presently, emerging countries from Asia are increasingly willing to invest in polar infrastructure and science on the back of their growing influence in world politics. South Korea has also invested heavily in its Antarctic infrastructure and capabilities recently and has been identified as an actor with economic and political interests that are potentially challenging for the existing Antarctic order. This article first assesses the extent and performance of the growing bilateral cooperation between South Korea and one of its closest partners, New Zealand, a country with strong vested interests in the status quo order. How did the cooperation develop between these two actors with ostensibly diverging interests? This article finds that what may have been a friction-laden relationship, actually developed into a win-win partnership for both countries. The article then moves on to offer an explanation for how this productive relationship was made possible by utilising a mutual socialisation approach that explores socio-structural processes around status accommodation.


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