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Fish and Dams/Weirs. In the Murray Darling Basin. Re-snagging Strategies.

Fish and Dams/Weirs. In the Murray Darling Basin. Re-snagging Strategies

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Page 1: Fish and Dams/Weirs. In the Murray Darling Basin. Re-snagging Strategies

Fish and Dams/Weirs.In the Murray Darling Basin.

Re-snagging Strategies.

Page 2: Fish and Dams/Weirs. In the Murray Darling Basin. Re-snagging Strategies

Definition.Fish - Any of various mostly cold-blooded aquatic vertebrates usually having scales and breathing

through gills.

Dams - A barrier constructed to contain the flow of water or to keep out the sea.

Weir - A low dam built across a stream to raise its level or divert its flow

Murray Cod.

Hume Dam.

Yarrawonga Weir.

Page 3: Fish and Dams/Weirs. In the Murray Darling Basin. Re-snagging Strategies

Management Strategies.“The Murray Darling Basin native fish population are currently estimated to be about 10% of their pre-

European settlement levels.”

The following seven strategic interventions were considered in the development of the conceptual

• model, as identified in the Project Brief:• allocation of environmental flows;• habitat restoration;• abatement of cold water pollution;• provision of fishways and fish passage;• establishment of an aquatic reserve system;• carp management; and• management of other alien fish species that are threatening native fish.The Expert Panel applied the conceptual model to the following four response variables:• restoring native fish;• restoring listed threatened fish and fish communities;• reducing the impact of carp; and• reducing the impact of other alien fish species that are threatening native fish.

Page 4: Fish and Dams/Weirs. In the Murray Darling Basin. Re-snagging Strategies

The negative impacts on fish communities.

Threat. Threatening Process.

Flow regulation. Loss of water to other uses, critical low flows, loss of flow variation, loss of flow seasonality, loss of low to medium floods, permanent flooding and high water, increased periods no flow.

Habitat degradation. Damage to riparian zones, removal of in-streamHabitats, sedimentation.

Lowered water quality. Increased nutrients, turbidity, sedimentation, salinity,Artificial changes in water temperature, pesticides, andOther contaminants.

Barriers. Impediments to fish passage resulting from the construction and operation of dams, weirs, levees, culverts, etc., and non-physical barriers such as increased velocities, reduced habitats, water quality and thermal pollution. (changes in water temperature.)

Alien species. Competition with and/or predation by carp, gambusia, oriental weatherloach, redfin perch, and trout.

Exploitation. Recreational and commercial fishing pressure on depleted stocks, illegal fishing.

Diseases. Outbreak and spread of EHNV (Epizootic Haematopoietic Necrosis Virus.) and other viruses, diseases and parasites.

Translocation and stocking. The loss of genetic integrity and fitness caused by inappropriate translocation and stocking of native species.

Page 5: Fish and Dams/Weirs. In the Murray Darling Basin. Re-snagging Strategies

The positive impacts of fish communities.There are major strategies to help the declining figures of native fish in the Murray Darling Basin.

250,000 native fish release back into the Basin.The positive outcomes to this strategy is it will help maintain the river’s system’s biodiversity balance. The release of the native

fish will help to bolster and sustain populations of native fish. It will also assist in controlling the introduction of the alien fish the carp.

The introduction of the Sea to Hume Fishway. The establishment of the Fishways is one factor of the Native Fish Strategy, other factors include protecting and rehabilitating

fish habitat and threatened species, controlling alien fish species and managing fish translocation and stocking. The Fishway helps give native fish a way through the river Murray. The Fishway is a positive impact for the Murray Darling Basin as it helps the lifecycle and ecology of these species. The Fishway have certain measures to protect the native fish from prey, they have installed protective grid mesh covering the fish during its time in the Fishway, ensuring it is not hunted as prey by birds.

Page 6: Fish and Dams/Weirs. In the Murray Darling Basin. Re-snagging Strategies

Dams and Weirs.

Page 7: Fish and Dams/Weirs. In the Murray Darling Basin. Re-snagging Strategies

How the weirs effect the flow.Location. Natural. Current. Current as % of

natural.

Albury. 4670 5110 109

Yarrawonga. 6090 4610 76

Euston. 12040 5920 49

S.A border. 13530 5920 44

Murray mouth. 12640 4510 36 (Now critical – see image below.)

Impact of Man on Average Flows. (1892- 1974.) (GL/YEAR)

Page 8: Fish and Dams/Weirs. In the Murray Darling Basin. Re-snagging Strategies

The negative impacts of Dams and Weirs.

Dams and weirs both have their impacts to the Murray Darling Basins native fish.Impacts include:• Dams and Weirs break-off important breeding migrations. • They both allow boundless amounts of water extraction for irrigation.• The release of extremely cold water, as the result of low level water outlets, which greatly reduces

the river’s temperatures to the point where the native fish cannot breed. Native fish larvae also cannot survive, and sometimes native fish can not exist at all. This issue has caused what is known as “Thermal pollution” or “Cold water Pollution.” can affect rivers for up to 200 kilometres downstream of a large dam.

Page 9: Fish and Dams/Weirs. In the Murray Darling Basin. Re-snagging Strategies

Links.http://www.mdbc.gov.au/NFS/murraydarling_basin_fish_managementhttp://www.mdbc.gov.au/NFS/native_fish_informationhttp://wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=fishhttp://wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=damhttp://wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=weirhttp://www.nativefish.asn.au/cod.htmlhttp://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/118809806/abstracthttp://thelivingmurray.mdbc.gov.au/__data/page/195/fishways_web.pdfhttp://www.mdbc.gov.au/__data/page/184/NFS_guide_investments.pdf