Lachlan River System

Image: River Red Gum Woodland, Juanbung in Spring 2021. Photo credit: Fiona Dyer

About the Lachlan

The Lachlan River flows through the traditional lands of the Wiradjuri, Nari Nari, Mutthi Mutthi, Ngiyampaa, and Yita Yita Nations forming songlines and dreaming tracks. The Lachlan rises near Gunning north-east of Canberra and travels 1400 km to the Great Cumbung Swamp near Oxley in NSW. As the fourth longest river in Australia, it is largely disconnected from the rest of the Murray-Darling Basin, only joining the Murrumbidgee River during large flood events.

The river system sustains diverse landscapes and species. During floods, large areas of water cover floodplains, wetlands, and ancient river pathways, bringing the landscape to life. Birds, other animals, and dormant plants emerge, while small wetlands are replenished, helping trees like black box and river red gums survive the dry periods.

The construction of dams and the use of water for irrigation have altered the river's natural flow and impacted wetland health, especially those at the river's end. These changes have transformed the character of the river and its floodplains.

Environmental water is used in the Lachlan River System to support the significant ecological values across the catchment, particularly those most affected by changes to flow regimes.

Drone image of the Great Cumbung Swamp in November 2023. Photo credit: Will Higgisson

Larval fish monitoring at Wallanthery. Photo credit: Rhian Clear

Rod Ubrihien collecting water quality data in Lake Brewster. Photo credit: Rod Ubrihien

Our Work

Learn about the key activities taking place in this Area.

Native Vegetation

Native Vegetation monitoring and evaluation will focus on groundcover vegetation and lignum shrubland on the lower Lachlan floodplain, and tall emergent marshlands within the Great Cumbung Swamp. It will also assess the extent and duration of inundation caused by environmental water.

Native vegetation will be assessed using a combination of water observations from space, data collected using drones (lignum shrublands and tall emergent marshlands) and field-based methods (groundcover vegetation) to evaluate the role of environmental water in maintaining and improving native vegetation.

Ciaran Cullen running a trasect out in Lake Bunumburt during Autumn 2024.

Native Fish

Native Fish monitoring will focus on how environmental water contributes to maintaining or improving native fish populations in the Lachlan Area. Field sampling will involve electrofishing at 20 fixed main-channel sites in early autumn (March/April) each year. Sites will be established across a stream length of 600 km, spanning two reaches (10 sites per reach): the mid-Lachlan River from Forbes until upstream of Brewster Weir, and the lower-Lachlan River around Hilston.

Larval fish sampling in Wallanthery.

Native Waterbirds

Waterbird monitoring will be conducted in the event of bird breeding and/or in cases where environmental water is used to support waterbirds. Event-based ground-surveys will occur at a minimum of 10 survey sites over four trips, timed around the watering event. This theme will also draw on data collected through complementary monitoring programs such as annual spring aerial and ground waterbird surveys conducted by NSW DCCEEW and UNSW.

Fledgling Glossy ibis at the inflow wetland to Ballyroggan (Lake Brewster) from a successful breeding season.

Cultural Outcomes

The Lachlan team supports a culturally safe and staged approach in Flow-MER. As such, the program's expected outcomes will mature and evolve with the building of new relationships and trust as it is built over the life of the program. We are working in collaboration with the Aboriginal Water Committee to the Lachlan in the planning of the Cultural Outcomes Theme, and have engaged members of the committee as our Cultural Advisors. We are also continuing to build our relationship with the Down the Track program, and continue to support environmental and cultural education camp-out weekends.

The Down the Track crew conducting fish sampling. Photo credit: Mal Carnegie

River Flows and Connectivity

The River Flows and Connectivity Theme in the Lachlan will evaluate what environmental water contributed to the flow regime:

  • In the riverine system by evaluating the timing, duration and magnitude of flow events attributed to Commonwealth environmental water (CEW) using gauged flow data and daily water accounting, and;
  • In the creeks and floodplain system by estimating the timing, duration and extent of inundation attributed to CEW using satellite imagery.
Great Cumbung Swamp in flood. Photo credit: Will Higgisson

Knowledge Exchange and Community Engagement

The Lachlan Team lead a range of activities designed to share knowledge and information to the Flow-MER Program team, operational stakeholders, key landholders and stakeholder groups outside of the delivery of the Program.  We write a quarterly newsletter which is shared digitally and printed to provide updates to landholders and the local community. We also provide training and education days providing an opportunity to talk to the local community and youth about the importance of flow variability and the role of environmental water.

Waterbug ID at the Down the Track Program in Lake Cargelligo, September 2023. Photo credit: Gus MacDonald

Research

Our research over 2024 to 2026 focuses on blue-green algae outbreaks in Lake Brewster and the lower Lachlan. This project will identify and quantify the key drivers of blue-green algae outbreaks such as temperature and flow velocity and develop management protocols aimed at improving environmental water use to reduce the occurrence, severity, and impact of blue green algae outbreaks.

The sun sets over lake Brewster, February 2025. Photo credit: Rod Ubrihien

Latest News

Join our community and get new updates sent directly to your inbox.

News

Our Team

The Centre for Applied Water Science, University of Canberra has been engaged by the CEWH to conduct Flow-MER activities in the Lachlan River System from July 2024 to June 2029.

Lead Contact:
Dr Will Higgisson
University of Canberra

Partners

Adam Kerezsy

NSW Government