Berliner Boersenzeitung - 'Citizen scientists' battle to save historic UK river

EUR -
AED 4.229626
AFN 72.557604
ALL 96.200283
AMD 434.304194
ANG 2.061644
AOA 1056.111273
ARS 1608.366971
AUD 1.624462
AWG 2.075944
AZN 1.961012
BAM 1.959872
BBD 2.316914
BDT 141.153259
BGN 1.968616
BHD 0.434975
BIF 3415.570318
BMD 1.151703
BND 1.471489
BOB 7.977574
BRL 6.023521
BSD 1.150395
BTN 106.10737
BWP 15.685657
BYN 3.42682
BYR 22573.37436
BZD 2.313607
CAD 1.577706
CDF 2608.606438
CHF 0.906401
CLF 0.026516
CLP 1047.036065
CNY 8.011532
CNH 7.927786
COP 4266.390788
CRC 540.339027
CUC 1.151703
CUP 30.520123
CVE 110.495044
CZK 24.447537
DJF 204.846478
DKK 7.472351
DOP 70.218019
DZD 152.293142
EGP 60.314344
ERN 17.275542
ETB 181.205966
FJD 2.548085
FKP 0.865883
GBP 0.864249
GEL 3.132339
GGP 0.865883
GHS 12.521068
GIP 0.865883
GMD 84.64982
GNF 10085.259587
GTQ 8.817357
GYD 240.800286
HKD 9.024915
HNL 30.45433
HRK 7.536975
HTG 150.776526
HUF 390.904627
IDR 19546.066035
ILS 3.578709
IMP 0.865883
INR 106.404091
IQD 1506.930794
IRR 1521456.949262
ISK 143.444364
JEP 0.865883
JMD 180.956741
JOD 0.816554
JPY 183.182895
KES 149.25565
KGS 100.716474
KHR 4612.683422
KMF 494.080561
KPW 1036.583062
KRW 1717.137006
KWD 0.353285
KYD 0.958592
KZT 555.504113
LAK 24686.288142
LBP 103012.919266
LKR 358.214225
LRD 210.506434
LSL 19.352807
LTL 3.400679
LVL 0.696653
LYD 7.373351
MAD 10.807353
MDL 20.015584
MGA 4788.970338
MKD 61.646389
MMK 2418.752297
MNT 4116.758787
MOP 9.277475
MRU 45.865285
MUR 53.692156
MVR 17.805285
MWK 1994.352117
MXN 20.347536
MYR 4.512364
MZN 73.59289
NAD 19.352807
NGN 1574.711229
NIO 42.33015
NOK 11.076035
NPR 169.776624
NZD 1.970322
OMR 0.442828
PAB 1.15039
PEN 3.97095
PGK 4.960413
PHP 68.687266
PKR 321.348828
PLN 4.260298
PYG 7466.7073
QAR 4.204854
RON 5.092139
RSD 117.408061
RUB 94.300137
RWF 1678.895356
SAR 4.324546
SBD 9.273119
SCR 15.398642
SDG 692.173095
SEK 10.712771
SGD 1.471444
SHP 0.864075
SLE 28.332368
SLL 24150.643776
SOS 656.266306
SRD 43.271205
STD 23837.922132
STN 24.551755
SVC 10.065913
SYP 127.696075
SZL 19.338261
THB 37.263379
TJS 11.043195
TMT 4.036718
TND 3.397774
TOP 2.773023
TRY 50.912745
TTD 7.801208
TWD 36.762926
TZS 3005.944222
UAH 50.714084
UGX 4343.023049
USD 1.151703
UYU 46.76696
UZS 13908.897074
VES 513.943044
VND 30289.782943
VUV 137.728848
WST 3.172031
XAF 657.325511
XAG 0.014343
XAU 0.00023
XCD 3.112535
XCG 2.073207
XDR 0.817502
XOF 657.325511
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.684228
ZAR 19.245057
ZMK 10366.706959
ZMW 22.402543
ZWL 370.847823
  • CMSC

    0.0000

    22.99

    0%

  • NGG

    -0.0100

    90.89

    -0.01%

  • BP

    0.2300

    42.9

    +0.54%

  • JRI

    -0.0500

    12.54

    -0.4%

  • AZN

    2.1100

    192.01

    +1.1%

  • BCE

    0.6521

    25.9

    +2.52%

  • BCC

    1.7200

    71.72

    +2.4%

  • GSK

    0.3800

    53.77

    +0.71%

  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • RIO

    2.0300

    89.86

    +2.26%

  • BTI

    1.0100

    60.94

    +1.66%

  • RYCEF

    0.3800

    16.5

    +2.3%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    22.95

    -0.17%

  • RELX

    0.3300

    34.47

    +0.96%

  • VOD

    0.1900

    14.6

    +1.3%

'Citizen scientists' battle to save historic UK river
'Citizen scientists' battle to save historic UK river / Photo: Darren Staples - AFP

'Citizen scientists' battle to save historic UK river

On the banks of the River Wye on the border between England and Wales, Pat Stirling flings a plastic measuring jug tied to a rope into the water.

Text size:

Up and down the river, a team of 250 others have been doing the same, hoping to save it from an unfolding ecological crisis.

"The river is declining. The next thing is it's partially dead, then it's completely dead," Stirling told AFP between tests.

The researchers say that after years of being ignored, their data has finally forced admissions about a pollution problem caused mostly by chicken manure.

The Wye Valley and its meandering river have notably inspired the Romantic poet William Wordsworth who eulogised it in the 1798 poem "Tintern Abbey".

Stretching 250 kilometres (155 miles) from its source in mid-Wales to the Severn estuary, the Wye cuts through stunning countryside.

But in 2020 signs began to emerge that the river and its rare wildlife were under threat.

People noticed that the usually smooth stones on the floor of the river had become "slimed up", said Stirling, 43, a carbon footprint consultant originally from Australia.

- 'Disgusting stuff' -

Bird and insect life dwindled and anglers noticed that fish were struggling to grow to larger sizes.

Most noticeably, the Water Crowfoot -- an aquatic flowering plant that the river was once thick with -- was disappearing.

First thoughts turned to a nearby sewage treatment plant.

But as nothing had changed in the way the plant operated locals concluded that it was no more polluting than previously.

"You can take a shot of sewage overflow but what you can't take a photo of is the shocking amounts of animal manure coming out of the intensive poultry units," Stirling said.

A study of planning applications on both sides of the border pointed to the vast number of poultry units that had sprung up along the river in recent years.

Campaigners estimate that there are now 20 million farmed birds in the area of the River Wye in over 760 units.

The units supply a chicken processing plant run by Avara Foods in Hereford, which a decade ago won a huge contract to supply UK supermarket giant Tesco.

After one reported pollution incident, Stirling investigated and found "this horrendous smell and this truly disgusting stuff everywhere".

- 'Declining' -

"Something had gone awfully wrong. I took samples and identified that it was coming from a specific farm", he said.

The manure produced by the chicken sheds contains high levels of the essential nutrient phosphorus, excessive amounts of which damage water quality.

The manure is either spread onto farmland and then washed into the river by rain or into the river directly from the ground where it is dropped by free-range chickens.

Wye phosphorus levels were "nearly 60 percent greater than the national average", Lancaster University scientist Paul Wither told MPs last year.

Conservation watchdog Natural England, which advises the government, in May downgraded the water quality rating of the river, following declines in important species like Atlantic salmon and white-clawed crayfish.

Stirling said he believed the updating of the classification to "unfavourable-declining" only happened due to the noise generated by campaigners and "citizen scientists" like him.

He welcomed the body's interest but added: "We also know they would never have done anything if we hadn't (got involved in testing)."

- Positive signs -

If the river is to avoid the two lowest categories -- "part-destroyed" or "destroyed" -- the authorities need to urgently pull the right "levers", he said.

Some of the signs are positive.

In a letter to farmers this month, Avara foods explained that contracts would be changed so their manure could not be sold within the Wye catchment area.

Its aim was to make sure that "our supply chain is demonstrably not part of the problem by 2025", it said.

The firm told AFP that although they would play their part to "mitigate the impact of our supply chain" Avara Foods were not "direct polluters".

"Farms in our supply chain use or sell poultry litter... yet we recognise the potential impact this may have," it added.

Stirling said he believed Avara's new position was linked to a law suit in the United States involving its joint owner, food giant Cargill, and other poultry producers.

A judge in January ruled that the companies were responsible for degrading the Illinois River in a similar way to the pollution of the Wye.

For now Stirling and his team of citizen scientists will carry on testing and feel hopeful they can make a difference.

"What gets measured gets managed and we are seeing that happen. We are getting traction because of the public data noise," he said.

(K.Müller--BBZ)