Resilience In Action: How environmental water protected Goulburn River health through floods, fires and poor-quality inflows

Poor water quality impacted the Goulburn River at Shepparton in March 2026 as a result of sediment, ash and other organic material entering the waterway from the Longwood bushfire. A delivery of water for the environment helped dilute poor-quality water and maintain dissolved oxygen levels. Credit: Daniel Lovell, Goulburn Broken CMA

A resilient river system is one that can adapt and recover. Especially from disturbances associated with climatic extremes such as floods, fires, and drought. In a river ecosystem, resilience is reflected in diverse and abundant plants communities. As well as healthy populations of aquatic fauna and the availability of refuge options that animals can utilise during extreme events.

The Goulburn River has experienced a sequence of extreme events in recent years. This has included major floods in 2022. Followed by unseasonal overbank flows in January 2024. Recently, there have been issues from drying catchments. Reducing inflows from tributaries and extensive bushfires in early 2026. These pressures highlight the ongoing challenge in a highly variable and changing climate.

Post-flood recovery and the role of environmental water in rebuilding connection

Riverbank vegetation was significantly affected by multiple induction events. Particularly vegetation in the lower and littoral zones. This began with the major October 2022 floods. Followed by multiple inundation events until early 2024. Long-term monitoring was undertaken by the Arthur Rylah Institute for Environmental Research. It detected measurable declines in vegetation cover and diversity following these events.

A key focus of subsequent environmental water management in the Goulburn River has been supporting the recovery of riverbank vegetation. In the lower Goulburn, the most effective flow sequence for vegetation recovery is a spring fresh followed by low flows over summer. Environmental water deliveries in 2024 and 2025 were designed to provide this sequence. Allowing vegetation to establish before the onset of higher-demand operational deliveries.

In 2025 an Autumn fresh was also coordinated with operational flows. This collaborative approach enabled environmental and operational water delivery at the same time.

This avoided repeated inundation of lower bank vegetation. While still providing sufficient flow to stimulate growth in the higher bank zones and enable seed dispersal. Early observations indicate vegetation is showing encouraging signs of recovery.

These four images show a change in vegetation on the Goulburn River bank over time. A. December 2023 showing vegetation resprouting after the high winter and spring flows. B. December 2024 where the winter flows had receded much earlier in spring, allowing more time for active growth over the warmer months. C. February 2025 showing mature vegetation under low summer flow. D. March 2025 Showing further maturation of vegetation with many individuals dropping seed. Credit: Arthur Rylah Institute

How drying conditions and bushfires increased vulnerability to water-quality risks

Prolonged hot and dry conditions increase stress on aquatic ecosystems. Particularly for species such as fish that depend on adequate dissolved oxygen levels. As water temperatures rise, dissolved oxygen availability declines. Increasing the risk of hypoxic (low oxygen) conditions. Environmental water can help reduce this risk by maintaining flow and improving oxygenation.

Under dry conditions, organic matter and nutrients accumulate within the catchment and tributaries. When rainfall occurs, this material is rapidly washed into the river system. There its decomposition can further deplete oxygen levels and degrade water quality.

The Goulburn River’s vulnerability has been further heightened by the 2026 Longwood and Trawool bushfires. They burned approximately 140,000 hectares of catchment. Recovery is expected to take several years. In the interim, rainfall over fire-affected areas may generate runoff carrying ash, sediment and debris into the river. Significantly impacting water quality and instream habitat.

Environmental water plays an important role in managing these risks. It can be used to dilute poor-quality inflows. As well as provide temporary refuge areas for aquatic fauna. Targeted freshes also help sustain instream habitat and reduce the severity of hypoxic events. Including those caused by tributary inflows or nutrient runoff from human activities.

Poor-quality inflow and how environmental water delivery reduced risk at a critical moment

In early March 2026, a significant rainfall event over fire-affected catchments resulted in poor-quality inflows. Runoff containing sediment, ash and organic material led to a decline in water quality.

At the time, environmental water was already being delivered in the lower Goulburn River. These flows provided critical dilution. Reducing the concentration of contaminants. Helping to maintain dissolved oxygen levels within a range suitable for aquatic life. As a result, the potential impact on fish and other aquatic fauna was minimised.

This event highlights the importance of having environmental water available and actively managed during high-risk periods. Strategic delivery at the right time can make a measurable difference in mitigating sudden ecological threats.

Poor water quality impacted the Goulburn River at Shepparton in March 2026 as a result of sediment, ash and other organic material entering the waterway from the Longwood bushfire. A delivery of water for the environment helped dilute poor-quality water and maintain dissolved oxygen levels. Credit: Daniel Lovell, Goulburn Broken CMA

Proactive, adaptive management into the future

Recent events in the Goulburn River show resilience is not a static condition. It is one that must be actively supported through informed and adaptive management. Flow monitoring has been critical. Building the evidence base needed to understand how environmental water influences ecological responses to floods, droughts and fire-related impacts.

This knowledge is enabling a shift from reactive management to more proactive and strategic decision-making. Identifying the most effective flow patterns. Understanding how ecosystems respond under different conditions. Environmental water can be used to support recovery and reduce the impact of future disturbances.

Ongoing Flow-MER programs will continue to track ecological condition and responses over time. Including the long-term effects of the 2026 fires and continued drying conditions. This will allow managers to refine delivery strategies. As well as anticipate emerging risks and protect key ecological values such as riverbank vegetation, instream habitat and aquatic fauna.

As climate variability and extreme events become more frequent, this adaptive, evidence-based approach will be essential. Environmental water supported by robust monitoring, strong collaboration and a commitment to learning will remain central to building and sustaining resilience in the Goulburn River system.

Our work in the Goulburn River and Northern Victorian Tributaries

The Goulburn River and Northern Victorian Tributaries (GRANT) Area includes the Goulburn, Broken, Campaspe and Loddon River systems. Learn about the work we're doing in this river system and key insights gained as part of the Flow-MER program.

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