Saturday, 13 May 2017 07:55

Nitrate sensor ready for launch

Written by  Nigel Malthus
Lincoln Agritech’s Brian Miller with a prototype of the nitrate sensor beside sampling bores. Lincoln Agritech’s Brian Miller with a prototype of the nitrate sensor beside sampling bores.

Lincoln Agritech has unveiled an advanced optical nitrate sensor for groundwater which it says will bring a paradigm shift in New Zealand’s groundwater management.

The slim stainless steel device is designed to give real-time data while being cheap and simple enough for widespread deployment. Now at the beta-testing stage, it is hoped to be commercially available by the end of the year.

The Lincoln University-owned R&D company says that, as NZ moves to adopt caps for nitrogen losses to waterways, it “remains unclear” how levels would be reliably measured. Current approaches are based on modelling rather than direct measurement, largely because present realtime sensors are too expensive.

But it says its sensor should retail for no more than $US5000 but yield data with similar accuracy and calibration consistency as sensors retailing for $US15,000-$US30,000 each.

The sensor is housed in a slim cylinder with a single hole through the middle. Water flowing through the hole is analysed by shining various wavelengths of light across the flow.

Agritech’s group manager environmental research, Blair Miller, says the device works by measuring the transference of UV light at 220 nanometres wavelength, which is absorbed by nitrates. Other wavelengths are detected and corrected for factors such as dissolved organic carbon and turbidity from silt.

He says other more expensive optical sensors are designed primarily for the wastewater industry and are more complex, having to measure a far greater range of targets and contaminants.

“We’ll never sell this as a wastewater sensor. But this will go down a dairy farm well anywhere in NZ, within reason,” says Miller.

The other devices are also “much fatter”, while theirs is specifically designed to fit in a 50mm bore, which could be direct-driven rather than expensively drilled.

The device has electronics that allow for easy connectivity by landline, wireless or cell network, which will also help keep deployment costs down.

Agritech hydrogeologist Jens Rekker revealed that prototypes of the sensor have performed well in monitoring the Hinds/Hekeao managed aquifer recharge project, south of Ashburton.

The year-old pilot project is aimed at recharging shallow aquifers in the district by taking clean alpine water from the Rangitata and letting it seep in from a purpose-built ‘leaky’ pond.

Rekker’s data shows that both the MAR and the new sensor have been working as planned. Nitrate concentrations in downstream groundwater have been markedly lower, and the sensors’ continuous data correlated very well with nitrate measurements from conventional sampling.

Rekker says the “utes and boots” method -- having a person drive out to take a sample for lab analysis to get a paper report three weeks later -- is “an expensive snap-shotty way of collecting data”.

“We know, especially in the flow field, how much richness that automated data collection provides for us,” he says.

Lincoln Agritech chief executive Peter Barrowclough says the sensor’s ability to vastly increase the amount of data available for decisionmaking in the whole community will be “huge”.

“We don’t know exactly yet how it’ll be used in all circumstances. But we’ve got science programmes running alongside it.

“We’ll sell this to people like DairyNZ, regional councils and NIWA. They’ll all learn from having more data, so over time we’ll have a much richer data set from which to make better-quality decisions.”

Miller says Overseer “finishes” at the bottom of the root zone but a lot of farms would have natural assimilative capacity for denitrification below that, which the sensors could potentially demonstrate.

More like this

Study sheds light on contamination

A new study shows that analyses how water flows to reach rivers and streams can help reveal what proportion of agricultural contaminants come from past or recent land use practices.

MOU a significant milestone

The signing of a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) between Lincoln University and Ballance Agri-Nutrients is being hailed as a significant milestone.

SIDE returns to Lincoln

The highly anticipated South Island Dairy Event (SIDE) is returning to Lincoln University.

Rural resilience programme expands

Mental health and resilience programme WellMates is available at Massey University for a second year after research found that it has significantly benefitted participants.

Featured

Vaccinate against new lepto strain

A vet is calling for all animals to be vaccinated against a new strain of leptospirosis (lepto) discovered on New Zealand dairy farms in recent years.

Funding boost for red meat

Two major red meat sector projects are getting up to a combined $1.7 million in funding from the New Zealand Meat Board (NZMB).

Otago's supreme winner

Angus Barr and Tara Dwyer of The Wandle, Lone Star Farms in Strath Taieri have been named the Regional Supreme Winners at the Otago Ballance Farm Environment Awards in Dunedin.

Editorial: Wake up Wellington

OPINION: The distress that the politicians and bureaucrats are causing to the people of Wairoa and the wider Tairāwhiti is unforgivable.

TV series to combat food waste

Rural banker Rabobank is partnering with Food Rescue Kitchen on a new TV series which airs this weekend that aims to shine a light on the real and growing issues of food waste, food poverty and social isolation in New Zealand.

National

Frontline biosecurity 'untouchable'

Biosecurity Minister Andrew Hoggard has reiterated that 'frontline' biosecurity services within Ministry for Primary Industries (MPI) will not be cut…

Machinery & Products

New name, new ideas

KGM New Zealand, is part of the London headquartered Inchcape Group, who increased its NZ presence in August 2023 with…

All-terrain fert spreading mode

Effluent specialists the Samson Group have developed a new double unloading system to help optimise uphill and downhill organic fertiliser…

» Latest Print Issues Online

Milking It

Plant-based bubble bursts

OPINION: Talking about plant-based food: “Chicken-free chicken” start-up Sunfed has had its valuation slashed to zero by major investor Blackbird…

» Connect with Dairy News

» eNewsletter

Subscribe to our weekly newsletter