Novel methods for managing freshwater refuges against climate change in southern Australia

Media type: 
Reports
Author/s: 
Belinda J. Robson
Edwin T. Chester
Mark Allen
Stephen Beatty
Jane M. Chambers
Paul Close
Barbara Cook
Courtney R. Cummings
with others
Institution/s: 
Murdoch University
Deakin University
University of Western Australia
State: 
Western Australia
Year: 
2013

Abstract

Southern Australia is becoming warmer and drier as climate change progresses, creating serious threats to freshwater ecosystems that are dependent on the presence of water for their existence. The overall aim of this research project was to develop and evaluate four potential methods for enhancing the role, function and resilience of refuges for freshwater biodiversity in southern Australia. It focussed on means to maintain the physical conditions in refuges within ranges tolerable for species and to maintain connectivity that allows species to retreat to, and expand from, refuges. The four approaches studied were: 

1. the feasibility of using cool-water releases (CWR) from reservoirs and shandying to control water temperature in rivers;
2. a method for deciding where streamside re-vegetation should occur in catchments to ensure maximum long-term negative effects on stream temperature; 
3. the potential for artificial urban wetlands (i.e. anthropogenic habitat) to act as refuges for freshwater biodiversity against climate change; 
4. a method for identifying redundant river regulation infrastructure and prioritizing artificial structures for removal during river restoration to improve connectivity along river channels for fauna movement. 

These four approaches were found to have the potential to address a range of objectives for refuge management, such as: reduce temperatures in refuges (1 & 2), increase number of refuges that act as colonization sources (all), assist dispersal into and out of refuges (all), increase biodiversity within refuges (all), increase permanence or resilience of refuges (all) and increase resistance or resilience of refuges during extreme events (1, 2 & 3). In particular, CWR could potentially be used to mimic natural thermal regimes, reduce the frequency and duration of extreme high temperature events and to assist movement of fish between thermal refuges, but further information and trials are required (1). Riparian planting can be used to reduce in-stream temperatures over the long-term and the tool developed here permits users to determine the optimal planting locations within catchments to maximise cooling effects for a given replanting investment (2). Perennial artificial wetlands can be used to provide refuges for biodiversity from wetland drying, and artificial wetlands can be modified to support higher biodiversity (3). The removal or modification of in-stream barriers can be used to create, protect or link refuges for freshwater species, especially fish, and the method developed here allows users to determine which artificial barriers have priority for removal within catchments (4).

There are synergies with catchment restoration, such as environmental flows (CWR, barrier removal and modification), and revegetation (riparian replanting, anthropogenic refuges).Therefore, the four refuge management approaches described in this project should be integrated into existing river and wetland restoration practices within catchments. Refuges across all types of waterbodies in catchments should be managed in an integrated way, comprising multiple waterbodies of each type to provide the diversity of habitat types required by freshwater species.

Please cite this report as:

Robson, BJ, Chester, ET, Allen, M, Beatty, S, Chambers, JM, Close, P, Cook, B, Cummings, CR, Davies, PM, Lester, RE, Lymbery, A, Matthews, TG, Morgan, D & Stock M, 2013, Novel methods for managing freshwater refuges against climate change in southern Australia. Final Report, National Climate Change Adaptation Research Facility, Gold Coast, 59 pp. 

View the other reports in this suite:
Evaluating the utility of cold-water releases for enhancing the resilience of riverine species
Riparian replanting for temperature control in streams
Anthropogenic refuges for freshwater biodiversity
Evaluating small barrier removal to improve refuge connectivity

Visit the research project page

This photo is copyright © 2007 Alexander Fortin

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