Murrumbidgee River System

Image: Steam Engine Swamp with fyke nets. Photo credit: Fleur Stelling

About the Area

The Murrumbidgee River System in southern NSW takes in the traditional lands of the Barapa Barapa, Bpangerang, Mutthi Mutthi, Nari Nari, Wamba Wamba, Wiradjuri and Yorta Yorta peoples.  

The Murrumbidgee is a lowland meandering river system with wetlands, lakes, swamps and creek lines. The Murrumbidgee is one of the largest river systems in the Murray-Darling Basin. Wetlands cover over 4 per cent (370,000 ha) of the Area, with over 1000 identified. Nationally important wetlands include the mid-Murrumbidgee and Lowbidgee floodplain, covering 2.5 per cent of the catchment area.  

The Murrumbidgee River is also one the most regulated rivers in Australia, controlled by multiple major reservoirs including the Snowy Mountains Hydro-electric Scheme, the Australian Capital Territory (ACT) Water Supply Scheme, and in NSW, primarily by two large dams: Burrinjuck Dam on the Murrumbidgee River (1,026,000 ML capacity) and Blowering Dam on the Tumut River (part of the Snowy River scheme with 1,628,000 ML capacity).

Delivery of Commonwealth environmental water in this river system consists of base flows, small fresh (pulse flows), wetland connection flows, large fresh (pulse flows), bank-full flows, and floodplain connection flows.  

Snipe Swamp. Photo credit: Fleur Stelling

Our Work

The Murrumbidgee Flow-MER project focuses on five basin themes: River Flows and Connectivity, Cultural Outcomes, Native Vegetation, Waterbirds and Native Fish. In addition to these themes, the Murrumbidgee project focuses on wetland fish, frogs, turtles and Australasian Bitterns. Monitoring is carried out in the following zones, and the information gathered is used to assess environmental water needs:

  • The Lower Murrumbidgee (in-river flows)
  • The Lower Murrumbidgee (Lowbidgee) floodplain
  • The Mid-Murrumbidgee River wetlands, and
  • The Yanco-Billabong Creek System.

Across the Basin

River Flows and Connectivity

We aim to find out how the flow regime and specifically water for the environment contributes to: connecting wetlands to their rivers and creeks, wetland depth and volume, and the wetting and drying of wetlands.

Waterbirds

Our aim with the Waterbirds monitoring is to find out how the flow regime and specifically water for the environment contributes to providing and supporting waterbird habitats, and the abundance and species diversity of waterbirds.

Cultural Outcomes

Through this theme we seek to engage First Nations people throughout the Murrumbidgee and explore how environmental water contributes to supporting cultural outcomes. Our approach involves consulting and listening, updating local First Nations groups on our activities and inviting participation, offering meaningful employment in our program (cultural advising and fieldwork), working alongside First Nations rangers, and organising various activities with First Nations groups according to their needs.

Native Vegetation

Our Native Vegetation monitoring aims to establish how water for the environment contributes to:

  • Maintaining or improving representative populations and communities of non-woody vegetation.
  • Maintaining or improving the condition of lignum shrublands.
  • Maintaining representative native vegetation communities in the Murrumbidgee Area through the various flows.
Native Fish

Through this theme, we aim to find out how water for the environment, and the flow regime more generally, contributes to: the expansion of populations of native fish, the make-up of native fish populations, native fish abundance, and native fish condition.

Gayini Drone photo of Pelican Nesting in March 2022-23. Photo credit: M.Carnegie

Wagourah Lake with pelicans. Photo credit: Emmalie Sanders
Area-scale Monitoring

We aim to find out what the flow regime and specifically water for the environment, including Commonwealth Environmental Water (CEW), contributes to: the provision of habitat for Southern bell frog and other frog species, the provision of habitats for tadpoles and small bodied native fish communities, turtle recruitment (juvenile turtles joining the population), the provision of habitat for Australasian Bitterns, and in the long term, turtle survival and maintenance of habitats that support threatened species.

Knowledge Exchange and Community Engagement

Our approach involves making Flow-MER knowledge available, accessible and relevant to local communities, and to involve them to improve Flow-MER activities, facilitate ownership and empower champions. Activities include regular social media postings, preparing articles for local media and the Flow-MER website, running citizen science activities, and holding field days relating to our monitoring techniques.

Research Projects

We will continue to develop research projects over the life of the program.  Current research projects include; Engaging with wetlands through multi-modal (visual and audio) techniques (under the research theme ‘understanding socio-ecological perspectives’). The waterbird research is focused on understanding how waterbirds react to both water flow and other environmental factors. It aims to support better management practices and help us better assess how waterbird populations respond to CEW (under the research theme ‘understanding flow-ecology relationships’).

Potential research projects (all under the research theme ‘understanding flow-ecology relationships’) include: understanding how changes in water flow affect plant growth, which in turn impacts the ecosystem, biodiversity, and low-oxygen water events in floodplain forests; creating a model to predict how wetland plants will respond to changes in water levels, and determining how well Sentinel satellites can monitor these plant changes; studying how golden perch move within the landscape and how their population changes over time.  

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Partners

Murrumbidgee Landcare Inc

Yanco Creek and Tributaries Advisory Council

Nari Nari Tribal Council