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What's causing degredation in the Yarra River? (Funded by Melbourne Water) |
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Matthew O'Brien (Honours Student)
Most rivers experience some form of
disturbance from agriculture, urbanisation, exotic species or altered flow
regimes. In an effort to remediate and assess these impacts, monitoring is
undertaken so impacts can be understood and managed. Biological monitoring
using macroinvertebrates is a popular method of aquatic biomonitoring because
it allows detection of intermittent pollution sources in rivers and reflects
how anthropogenic changes directly impact on aquatic communities.
Rapid
bioassessment approaches are the most commonly used approach for stream
monitoring and are used to measure against biological targets set in policy in
the state of Victoria
however results do not diagnose specific impacts in a stream. A field based microcosm
approach which isolates the effect of sediment quality on macroinvertebrates
can characterise factors involved in impairment of aquatic communities and can
be a useful addition to current rapid bioassessment protocol. This study
investigated the condition of the Yarra
River and one site in Brushy Creek (Victoria, Australia)
by using two methods; a rapid bio-assessment approach to examine overall stream
condition and a field based microcosm approach to isolate the effect of
sediment quality on macroinvertebrates. Rapid bio-assessment revealed a gradual
deterioration in stream condition from upstream to downstream in the Yarra
Catchment and that the Brushy Creek site was in poor condition.
The microcosm
approach indicated this deterioration in the middle Yarra may be habitat
related as macroinvertebrate assemblages in the microcosms did not
significantly vary from those upstream. Pollution, particularly heavy metals,
in the lower Yarra are likely to contribute to poor stream condition and nutrient
pollution was likely to impact the condition of the Brushy Creek site. This
study demonstrated that rapid bio-assessment methods used in conjunction with
the microcosm approach can assist in characterising factors involved in
impairment of aquatic communities from urban streams and rivers.
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