Watering event in Toorale and vegetation condition on the Western Floodplain

Coolibah woodland site on the Western Floodplain in Toorale National Park and Conservation Area in spring 2025. This site was completely submerged in autumn-winter 2025. Draw-down of the floodwaters led to the dense, species-rich cover of lush ground-cover vegetation visible in this image. Photo: D. Mackay, University of New England.

In the first half of 2025, floodwaters flowing south from Queensland and above-average rainfall in the Bourke area contributed to a large flooding event down the Warrego and Darling Rivers and across the Western Floodplain in the Toorale National Park and State Conservation Area.

An inundated Western Floodplain in Toorale National Park and Conservation Area following flows from central Queensland, April 2025. Photo: National Park and Wildlife Service.

This inundation represents the seventh such event in the six years since the peak of the last major drought in 2019. It was the largest extent of inundation across the Western Floodplain recorded in the Flow-MER Program since monitoring commenced in 2019.

The combination of natural flows and the delivery of Commonwealth environmental water in summer and autumn 2025 contributed a small volume to the Floodplain. Vegetation monitoring was conducted at long-term vegetation monitoring sites, including some sites that had not been inundated since 2020.  

Use of environmental water led to enhanced vegetation outcomes in spring 2025, including for vegetation richness, cover, and diversity across all four monitored communities on the Western Floodplain (unpublished data, to be made available with the 2025-2026 Annual Report). This aligns with patterns observed in previous years, where environmental flows have buffered against ecological decline during dry periods.  

The University of New England, engaged as a Flow-MER partner in the Darling and Warrego River Systems Area, draws on eleven years of its own data confirming that such flows improve conditions for flood-dependent plant communities.

The inundation conditions in autumn-winter 2025 supported the survival and reproductive success of key woody species such as lignum, black box and coolabah. These species showed signs of flowering and seed-setting during the autumn 2025 survey. Flood-dependent species such as flat-leaved spike sedge exploded in numbers, and flowered and fruited prolifically in the wetter conditions.

Flowering lignum in the foreground and flat-leaved spike sedge emerging from the floodwaters in the middle of the picture; coolabahs in the background getting a soaking. Western Floodplain of Toorale National Park and State Conservation Area, June 2025. Photo: C.L. Gross, University of New England.
Black box in flower, June 2025. Western Floodplain of Toorale National Park and State Conservation Area. Photo: D. Mackay University of New England.

Prior to the flow, draw-down of the previous floodwaters in spring 2024 after a long period of inundation in autumn and winter led to an increase in species richness and cover from the previous water year across all monitored communities. Widespread inundation and above-average rainfall in early 2025 supported a resurgence in vegetation cover, such as spike rush. Like 2024, the subsequent draw-down of floodwaters was followed by large increases in plant species richness, cover and diversity in spring 2025.

The 2024-25 monitoring results reaffirm that improvements in native plant species richness and cover and plant community composition in the Western Floodplain are closely associated with natural and environmental flows. Vegetation monitoring through the Flow-MER Program has reinforced the critical influence of watering regimes on the health of floodplain vegetation.

Taking a longer-term view, new statistical modelling of inundation impacts on vegetation has provided useful insights for management of the Western Floodplain ecosystems. This includes optimal durations of inundation for maintaining or increasing native plant cover in the four plant communities.

Output from a Generalised Additive Modelling analysis showing the optimal duration of inundation in lignum shrubland communities to maximise the cover of native vegetation – 80 to 100% native plant cover is obtained if inundations are delivered for about 80 to 120 days, as was achieved in the autumn 2025 inundation.
Such insights are extremely useful to water managers for making decisions on whether to provide water to the Western Floodplain, once required conditions have been met. For example, if water should be directed to the Western Floodplain to extend the duration of inundation and help support the completion of plant cycles.

A mosaic of flooding durations and frequencies is required across the targeted plant communities in the Western Floodplain. The length of inundation at Toorale is largely driven by natural events, and the optimal inundation duration has been delivered at a low percentage of the time over the past eleven years (less than 50% of the time in lignum, and less than 30% of the time in cooba, coolabah and chenopod communities). The upgraded construction of the Boera Dam in 2022 allows for improved water delivery to these plant communities. This type of monitoring of vegetation responses to inundation and evaluation of observations will be vital for informing decisions on such water delivery.

Our work in the Darling and Warrego River Systems

The Darling (Baaka) and Warrego (Warriku) River Systems stretch over 1300 km and contain rivers, wetlands, floodplains and lakes on the traditional lands of the Kurnu-Baakandji First Nations People. Learn about the work we're doing in these river systems and key insights gained as part of the Flow-MER Program.

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