Artificial flood boosts river red gums

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A huge man-made flood will protect thousands of hectares of threatened eucalypts.

SIXTEEN THOUSAND HECTARES of threatened river red gums along the Murray River on the NSW-Victoria border will gain from a NSW government plan to artificially flood the Koondrook-Perricoota State Forest from 2011.

The NSW Natural Resources Commission revealed in December 2009 that in some areas, 75 per cent of river red gums (Eucalyptus camaldulensis) are stressed, dead or dying from a lack of water. The new $57m project aims to simulate a major natural flood every three to four years, to help capitalise on winter rain.

"This will ensure at least 30 per cent of the Murray River's red gum forest remains in a healthy condition, along with assisting bird and fish breeding," said Tony Kelly, the NSW Minister for Planning, when he announced the plan on Tuesday.

Digging channels

Next month, engineers from Forests NSW and the NSW Office of Water will begin digging a channel to divert water from the Murray and start installing structures to contain the floodwater within the forest.

"It is going to give the red gums a long-needed drink, which will save some of these very mature trees," says Kevin Evans, with the National Parks Association of NSW. "The water will flow to the Murray via the forest, so it doubles the conservation benefit."

Earlier this year the NSW government announced that new national parks would conserve over 100,000 hectares of red gum forest.

This helped protect the largest concentration of red gums across both the Millewa Forest in NSW (around 40,000 ha) - adjacent to the Koondrook-Perricoota State Forest - and the Barmah National Park (around 30,000 ha), on the Victorian side of the Murray. But logging continues in the Koondrook-Perricoota State Forest, leaving it vulnerable, say experts.

Indigenous benefits


The new plan to flood the gum forests is a great start, says Belinda Fairbrother, with conservation group The Wilderness Society, based in Sydney. However, water supplies need to be extended to red gums in protected national parks spanning the entire Murray River, she adds.

Ian Cohen, a NSW Greens MP says the flooding plan will also benefit indigenous traditional owners of the area, such as the Yorta Yorta people, who have inhabited the area for tens of thousands of years.

"A happy river means happy people and communities," he told Australian Geographic. "It is their life blood; they want to see the place maintained in a healthy state and this sustainability will allow them to take on indigenous based tourism activities."
Australia’s first state is home to some of the country’s most beautiful treasures. The Great Dividing Range, like a gigantic backbone, supports snowfields to the south and majestic rainforests to the north, and separates the red sandhills from the picturesque surf beaches of the Pacific.
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Comments 10

  • I'm very glad to read about this positive environmental project. It is a start and I look forward to hopefully more initiatives to saving life along our Murry Darling rivers. Report

     
  • Glad to hear our state government is initiating this vital plan in this area of the Murray Darling.
    Let's hope more new environmental intiatives come faster than this one did, lest we end up
    with the "too little, too late" result. Thanks for keeping us informed AG.

    Report

     
  • Great news - let`s hope that this will save these wonderful trees. This inspiration
    creates positive thinking toward the environment and the future of our native trees.
    Congratulations. Report

     
  • This project is one of 5 major projects on the Murray - others are at Gunbower, Hattah lakes, Mulcra Island and Chowilla. For more informtion have a look at
    http://www.mdba.gov.au/programs/tlm Report

     
  • Great to hear that something positive is being done. Unfortunately though, it still leaves 45% of the Murray red gum forests in trouble according to the stats above. Let's hope for - and if we can, help towards - more positive, constructive projects like this to further reduce the damaged areas. Report

     
  • I understood that the M/D river system was struggling to reach the sea.
    I understand water flowing through the forest is returned to the river, but, with the spread of the water surface is not more water lost through evaporation? Report

     
  • It's the best news. Just a shame the local Indigenous groups are included only as beneficiaries of the scheme, and not acknowledged for the informed contribution they are making to the ecological and cultural heritage plans and fieldwork Report

     
  • A great project indeed, and well done Forests NSW. If this forest were a National Park, this kind of project could not happen. It is not logging that makes the forests vulnerable, as stated in the article by 'experts', but rather the now total inability to control weeds and undergrowth in National Parks. Fire is now the biggest threat. Local fire services have stated that they will not allow members to fight fires in the National Parks as it will be too dangerous. Report

     
  • I agree...well done to Forests NSW, NSW Office of Water, MDBA, NSW Fisheries, DECCW, etc, this is a great joint project. Active management is needed to improve the 'resilience' of our magnificent river red gum forests. This includes effective water management, and ecological thinning and burning, but not necessarily sawlog harvesting and lots of cattle. It's time to be positive and embrace a new era for our forests. Report

     
  • Our Indigenous Groups should be consulted as they are the experts, they were wonderful keepers of this great land for thousands of years. It took Western Man only a very short time to ruin everything. Glad something is being done for our dear old Murray River to say nothing of the Red Gums.
    Thanks for the informative reporting we need more of this so we know what is being done. Please keep us informed. Report

     

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