Stream Health Monitoring

“Nau mai haere mai ki Tasman Bay Guardians.”

Stream Health Monitoring Assessment Kit

Empowering Communities to Understand Their Waterways

Tasman Bay Guardians delivers Stream Health Monitoring Assessment Kit (SHMAK) training to help landowners, iwi, schools, and community groups understand and monitor the health of their local streams.

Using tools developed by National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research, SHMAK provides a practical, scientifically robust way to assess stream condition and track changes over time.

NIWA’s Stream Health Monitoring Assessment Kit (SHMAK) gives land owners, iwi, school and community groups simple, scientifically-sound tools and resources to monitor the ecological health of New Zealand’s streams.

  • Stream Health is the condition (or state) of the whole stream ecosystem, including water quality, physical features of the stream and its banks, and the plants and animals living there. It also includes aspects that affect human health, safety and enjoyment.
  • Monitoring means making a standard set of measurements and observations at regular intervals and keeping records of the results so that they can be compared over time.
  • Assessment is interpreting the monitoring results to judge how healthy the stream is. Assessments can be used to make decisions about use of a stream, e.g. whether it is safe to swim or fish there, or whether a change in management is needed to improve stream condition.
  • Kit

SHMAK provides a way to assess whether land-use practices are affecting waters. It also allows stream health to be tracked over time, so you can recognise if stream health is getting better, worse or staying the same. The function of this kit is not to replace more formal methods of stream health monitoring. It is an additional tool to empower communities to play their own role.

What’s in the kit?

  • SHMAK manual (printed and downloadable from the website)
  • Equipment needed to take measurements.

What’s in the manual?

  • Getting started: defining your goals, choosing sites, designing a monitoring programme choosing indicators to measure and ensuring everyone stays safe
  • Explanation of each indicator: what it is, why it is important
  • How to measure each indicator in a scientifically robust way
  • Managing and understanding your data
  • A glossary (at the end of the manual) that gives the meaning of technical terms.

Download the Manual here https://webstatic.niwa.co.nz/static/web/SHMAK_Manual.pdf

SHMAK Training Workshops

We deliver hands-on training to build confidence and capability in stream health monitoring.

Small Group Workshop (2-4 people)

  • 1 TBG coordinator
  • Full-day training (8:30am – 4:00pm)
  • Hands-on stream monitoring experience

$860 +GST

Larger Group Workshop (7-12 people)

  • 2 TBG coordinator
  • Full-day training (8:30am – 4:00pm)
  • Ideal for community groups, schools, or teams

$1,420 +GST

Whats Included

  • Travel to your site
  • SHMAK manual for participants
  • Shared snaks and drinks
  • Pratical, in-stream training

Why It Matters

  • Understand the health of your local waterways
  • Track environmental change over time
  • Support restoration and management decisions
  • Build community knowledge and stewardship

Join us at our next workshop

If you are interested in joining this educational event contact us below to express your interest and find out more.

Next Event Date:
SHMAK

We Need Your Help!

Tasman Bay Guardians is seeking funding from interested parties to enable schools to receive these amazing programmes. 

If you’re a company or group is interested in supporting this kaupapa,  please contact us today.

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