Local iwi place rāhui on Wharemauku Stream
MEDIA RELEASE
Local iwi place rāhui on Wharemauku Stream after detection of campylobacter on watercress in Paraparaumu
Monitoring by local iwi confirm the presence of the bug, campylobacter on watercress in Paraparaumu’s Wharemauku stream. The Wharemauku Stream runs through the Coastlands Shopping Mall, past the end of the Kāpiti Airport, and through residential areas before reaching the sea at Raumati Beach.
“The positive results were picked up as part of the new kaitiaki monitoring programme by Te Ātiawa ki Whakarongotai,” said Mahina-a-rangi Baker, Pou Takawaenga Taiao, Environmental Manager for the iwi, “the iwi has put a rāhui on the Wharemauku Stream to prevent the public from gathering any food, or having contact with water in the Stream, in order to limit the public health risk. This is the bug that caused the serious outbreak in 2016 spread through Havelock North’s drinking water.”
Dr Stephen Palmer, Medical Officer of Health says, “Campylobacter infection can be a very serious illness for the elderly, very young those with an impaired immune system who may require hospital treatment. On rare occasions the illness can be fatal.”
Symptoms usually appear 2 to 5 days after
exposure and improve after 2 to 3 days. The main symptoms
are:
• diarrhoea, which may blood in it;
• stomach
pain or cramps, which may be severe;
• flu like
symptoms, including headache, muscle pains, fever and
fatigue (feeling very
tired);
• nausea;
• vomiting.
The Ministry for Primary Industries (MPI) advise that all watercress harvested from any other local streams should be cooked before eaten and should not be consumed raw.
The Wharemauku Stream has traditionally been a source of food and enjoyment for not just the iwi, but the wider community. Te Ātiawa ki Whakarongotai is troubled by the worsening state of local waterways.
Baker says, “We must improve regulation on the types of land use that are driving pollution and contamination of waterways or the public’s health and well-being will continue to be at significant risk. We’ve surveyed our iwi to identify that 89% of them consume watercress that they harvest locally in small waterways. Our kaitiaki monitoring focuses on the actual sites and resources that we know the public are interacting with, and in doing so it is detecting significant issues that existing monitoring regimes have previously overlooked. This is broadening our understanding of what the public health implications of polluted waterways are for our community.”
The iwi is working with Kāpiti Coast District Council, Regional Public Health and Greater Wellington Regional Council to identify and fix the source of contamination.
ENDS