
EARTH322-23A (HAM)
Soil and Water Management
15 Points
Staff
Convenor(s)
David Campbell
5189
FG.3.02
david.campbell@waikato.ac.nz
|
|
Lecturer(s)
Dori Torres-Rojas
CELL
E.1.09
dori.torres-rojas@waikato.ac.nz
|
|
Louis Schipper
4468
FG.3.03
louis.schipper@waikato.ac.nz
|
|
You can contact staff by:
- Calling +64 7 838 4466 select option 1, then enter the extension.
-
Extensions starting with 4, 5, 9 or 3 can also be direct dialled:
- For extensions starting with 4: dial +64 7 838 extension.
- For extensions starting with 5: dial +64 7 858 extension.
- For extensions starting with 9: dial +64 7 837 extension.
- For extensions starting with 3: dial +64 7 2620 + the last 3 digits of the extension e.g. 3123 = +64 7 262 0123.
What this paper is about
This paper integrates an understanding of land/soil and water processes that occur at paddock to catchment to national scales. Emphasis is on management practices that optimise resource use for land-based production purposes, focusing on avoiding or minimising environmental effects.
Topics include soil degradation, soil fertility, nitrogen and phosphorus cycling, and the hydrological setting within which land use practices take place. Hydrological topics build on understanding catchment-scale processes and estimating water balance components, including evaporation and drainage. Topics in the paper are set within the context of resource management law and the National Policy Statement for Freshwater Management.
How this paper will be taught
The paper is taught via lectures (in-person, online and recorded), tutorials, practical tasks and assignments, a field trip, and an exam.
Required Readings
Powerpoint slides will be available on Moodle before the lecture. Available on Moodle is also a set of one-page outlines for each lecture with self-testing questions. These notes are not intended to be a complete collection of reference material for the course. You are expected to research the topics yourself, using the library resources.
McLaren and Cameron 1996 Soil Science. 2nd edition. Oxford Press is recommended reading and the same text book used for the 2nd year soils course EARTH221. There are 8 copies in the library.Learning Outcomes
Students who successfully complete the course should be able to:
Assessments
How you will be assessed
See assessment block below for details. Overall there are:
- Three lab reports worth a combined 20%
- A field trip report worth 15%
- Two tests worth 12.5% each
- Final exam worth 40%
The internal assessment/exam ratio (as stated in the University Calendar) is 60:40. The final exam makes up 40% of the overall mark.