Catchment connectivity, waterbird breeding and native plants were the focus of environmental flows in the Lachlan in 2022–23.
Key outcomes
Under very wet conditions, environmental water managers worked with partner agencies and stakeholders to coordinate the delivery of water for the environment to:
- support more than 50,000 Australian pelican nests to completion at Lake Brewster for the second consecutive season
- contribute to restoring a more natural ‘wetting’ cycle for lower Merrimajeel Creek braided channel floodplain, and the locally and culturally significant Dry Lake
- mimic a more natural flood recession in the Lachlan River below Lake Brewster to mitigate risks to water quality and biota from a sudden and sharp drop in river levels during summer
- provide a small summer fresh below Wyangala Dam to restore longitudinal connectivity and improve water quality in isolated pools, increase instream habitat, and promote recovery post major flood disturbance
- repurpose the Wyangala small summer fresh to benefit small-scale bird breeding in Wallamundary Creek and mitigate risks to fish from a reported algal bloom below Brewster Weir.
Catchment conditions
During the 2022–23 year the Lachlan catchment experienced very wet La Niña weather conditions for the third consecutive year. The full 350,000 megalitres (ML) of translucent flow was delivered past Lake Brewster Weir from 29 May to 29 July 2022.
The largest flood release on record from Wyangala Dam in November 2022 (>260,000 ML daily release), combined with local rainfall, led to record levels of system-wide wetland and floodplain inundation.
Water for the environment was managed primarily to:
- maintain lateral connectivity of floodplain inundation in the lower Lachlan distributary creeks prior to arrival of upstream flood flows
- support pelican breeding
- mitigate the risks of poor water quality and lack of in-stream habitat for water-dependent biota, including native fish, due to sudden, sharp falls in river levels from capturing all flows into storages.
About the catchment
The Lachlan catchment is in central western New South Wales, covering an area of 90,000 square kilometres. Climatic zones of the Lachlan catchment vary markedly as it flows from the headwaters and tablelands in the east through the slopes of the middle catchment, to the flat, western plains.
The major river is the Lachlan with nearly 1,300 kilometres of the 1,400-kilometre river regulated by water storages, of which Wyangala Dam is the largest at 1,220 gigalitres (GL). It starts as a chain of ponds near Gunning and ends in the Great Cumbung Swamp. The Lachlan River only flows through to the Murrumbidgee when both rivers are in flood.
The Lachlan catchment is characterised by alluvial floodplains and distributary creek systems. It maintains some of the most diverse assemblages of wetland habitats, some only found in this catchment. Important sites include the Booligal Wetlands, Lake Brewster, Lake Cowal, Great Cumbung and Lachlan swamps, all of which are wetlands of national significance.
Water for Country
The Lachlan is Country to the Wiradjuri, Nari Nari, Mutthi Mutthi, Ngiyampaa and Yita Yita Aboriginal peoples.
Water for Country is environmental water use planned by the Department of Planning and Environment and Aboriginal people to achieve shared benefits for the environment and cultural places, values and/or interests.
In the 2022–23 water year in the Lachlan catchment, widespread flooding provided an opportunity for environmental water managers to listen and learn from Aboriginal peoples about the healing power of water on Country. Responding to the call for water in the Galaridyi Bangamalagi: Sharing the Lachlan River film by Uncle Ray Budyaan Woods and Bernard Sullivan, water was delivered to the lower Merrimajeel floodplain.