Tumut

Indicator: Riparian Conditions

Results for this indicator are also available for   [an error occurred while processing this directive]

What the results tell us for Tumut

No quantitative information was available to assess changes in riparian areas within the Tumut Shire during the current reporting period and the previous reporting period. This current reporting period has seen six threatening processes impact on riparian condition. These are listed under the Threatened Species Conservation Act 1995 and the Fisheries Management Act 1994.

It is not known if Shire Council or community groups undertook any projects between July 2004 and June 2008 to rehabilitate riparian areas within the shire.

During the previous reporting period state government agencies, Shire Council and community groups or other organisations undertook a range of projects to rehabilitate riparian areas within the Shire. These projects produced positive outcomes such as erosion control, tree and shrub planting, and woody weed removal (OCE, 2004). Unfortunately updates on these projects and the condition of the riparian zones were unavailable for the current reporting period.

Condition of riparian zones in the shire

The extent to which the condition of riparian vegetation and streambank disturbance across the shire changed in the current reporting period is not known, as no comprehensive assessment of riparian condition was undertaken for the period and no other detailed shire-wide information was available.

Threats to riparian condition

Three processes relating to riparian condition have been listed as key threatening processes in the state (see Table 1) by the New South Wales (NSW) Scientific committee under the Threatened Species Conservation Act 1995. Fisheries Scientific Committee also listed, under the Fisheries Management Act 1994, three key threatening processes relevant to riparian areas.

Table 1. Listed threatening processes in NSW relevant to riparian condition in TumutShire
Name of threatening process Date of Final Determination or Gazettal
Alteration to the natural flow regimes of rivers, streams, floodplains and wetlands (DECC, 2008a) Final: 31 May 2002
Clearing of Native Vegetation (DECC, 2008b) Final: 21 September 2001
Human-caused climate change (DECC, 2008c) Gazetted: 17 November 2000
Removal and degradation of native riparian vegetation (DPI, 2008a) Final: 01 June 2005
Installation and operation of instream structures and other mechanisms that alter the natural flow regimes of rivers and streams (DPI, 2008b) Final: 01 June 2005
Removal of large woody debris from NSW rivers and streams (DPI, 2008c) Final: 01 June 2005

 

The impacts of these key threatening processes on riparian conditions and waterways include (DECC 2008 a, b; DPI 2008, a, b; DPI 2005a):

  • bank erosion
  • loss of biological diversity
  • impairment of important ecosystem services for fish and invertebrates (e.g. removal of refuges used during flooding or drought or removal of spawning sites)
  • reduced nutrient filtering capacity
  • increased light penetration of the water-body and loss of shade and shelter for fish
  • reduced inputs of organic carbon (for example, twigs and leaves)
  • changes to stream behaviour (increased and decreased flow, seasonality, frequency, duration, magnitude, timing predictability, rate of rise and fall of water levels and altering surface and subsurface water levels) and
  • exotic plants such as Alligator weed (Alternanthera philoxeroides) reducing stream flow

What is being done to protect riparian zones?

Information detailing what is being done to protect and enhance the riparian zones in the Tumut Shire, during the current reporting period, is unavailable.

Other nationally funded activities undertaken during the reporting period in the Murrumbidgee Catchment Management Authority area may have enhanced riparian conditions within the Tumut Shire.

References

DECC – see Department of Environment and Climate Change

Department of Environment and Climate Change (NSW) (2008a) NSW Scientific Committee—Final Determination, Alteration to the Natural Flow Regimes of Rivers, Streams, Floodplains and Wetlands—Key Threatening Process Declaration, NSW Department of Environment and Climate Change, viewed 14 October 2008, http://www.threatenedspecies.environment.nsw.gov.au/tsprofile/profile.aspx?id=20002

Department of Environment and Climate Change (NSW) (2008b) NSW Scientific Committee—Final Determination, Clearing of Native Vegetation—Key Threatening Process Declaration, NSW Department of Environment and Climate Change, viewed 14 October 2008-10-14, http://www.environment.nsw.gov.au/determinations/ClearingNativeVegKTPListing.htm

Department of Primary Industries (NSW) (2008a) Removal of large woody debris from NSW rivers and streams, NSW Department of Primary Industries, viewed 10 October 2008, http://www.dpi.nsw.gov.au/fisheries/habitat/publications/threats/removal-large-woody-debris

Department of Primary Industries (NSW) (2008b) Degradation of native riparian vegetation along NSW water courses, NSW Department of Primary Industries, viewed 10 October 2008, http://www.dpi.nsw.gov.au/fisheries/habitat/publications/threats/degredation-native-riparian-vegetation

Department of Primary Industries (NSW) (2005a) Fisheries Scientific Committee Recommendation—Installation and Operation of Instream Structures and Other Mechanisms that Alter Natural Flow Regimes of Rivers and Streams, NSW Department of Primary Industries, viewed 11 August 2005, http://www.fisheries.nsw.gov.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/5284/FR21_dams.pdf.

DPI - see Department of Primary Industries

OCE – see Office of the Commissioner of the Environment

Office of the Commissioner for the Environment (2004) Australian Capital Region State of the Environment Report 2004, Office of the Commissioner for the Environment, Canberra (see Riparian Condition)

 

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