Rural People & IssuesThe Good Oil: Odd goats and zinc
Written by
Annette Taylor
The Question:
She wants to know is this environmentally safe and is there a better method of disposing of it. “The footbath holds 40 litres but we’re about to get a larger bath that will hold more. Sometimes we use copper sulphate.” She adds that while re-using the solution is great in theory, the goats don’t understand theories so use the footbath as a lavatory while in there… The Answer:It depends who you ask. A Dunedin-based soil scientist I spoke with says while it depends on how much is being disposed, a lot of our soils are low in zinc anyway. “It could even have a small beneficial effect in some cases but it depends what the concentration is. It’s best not to put it in the same spot every time but spread it around.” Copper sulphate is quite similar, he says. “Again, this is fairly low in New Zealand soils and farmers use copper to improve fertility.” It may have a minimal effect, could have a beneficial effect, but if the concentrations are high, this could be an issue. His advice - the best thing to do is do the sums and work out how much of the product is being used in the first place, and spread over how far an area. Waikato agrichemical consultant Graham McBride is a founding member of the Waikato Pesticides Awareness Committee, which formed in 1989. Two years ago looked at agrichemical legacy issues in the US and Australia as part of a Winston Churchill scholarship. He believes there are some real deficiencies in New Zealand’s legislation and came up with 62 recommendations for the management of agrichemicals and contaminated land. “These are based on the good, the bad and the ugly from overseas forums and from their experiences gained over some 30 years of managing contaminated land. We, however, are very late starters with this issue – and this creates some opportunities. I was trying to extract the take-home message for us.” One of the recommendations dealt specifically with the disposal of toxic elements or more commonly ‘heavy metals’. “I’ve done a bit of work on zinc and believe that in this country we’re flat out setting ourselves up to recreate the same sort of legacy we’ve had with some of the old persistent agrichemicals. Only we’re doing it with modern chemicals, such as copper, zinc, cadmium, lead and some ectoparasiticides. In a report on the issue by the New South Wales Environment Protection Agency (the equivalent of the Ministry of Agriculture) one of the authors said that in New South Wales zinc is probably becoming the biggest environmental problem and threat to aquatic ecosystems.’ Graham points out that in New Zealand the problem could be greater still – “we also use it for facial eczema control, which inevitably comes out the back end of the cow and on to pastures, and sheep farmers use it too for footrot and eczema prevention.” Lincoln University studied aspects of footrot treatment in sheep, as part of a Ministry of Agriculture sustainable farming fund project. They found 304 sheep farmers used a total of 223 tonnes of zinc sulphate a year. “I tracked the author down and asked how are people disposing of this, and there was a blank silence. And then he said ‘I suppose they’re just chucking it out on the ground, or into a nearby stream.” Some calculations
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