4.6 Article

Adaptive Management of Malkumba-Coongie Lakes Ramsar Site in Arid Australia-A Free Flowing River and Wetland System

Journal

SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 13, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/su13063043

Keywords

Strategic Adaptive Management; freshwater fish; sleepy cod; thresholds of potential concern; freshwater management; social-ecological system

Funding

  1. Lake Eyre Basin Partnership
  2. National and International River Prizes
  3. South Australian Arid Lands Board
  4. Australian Research Council [LP180100159]
  5. Australian Research Council [LP180100159] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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The Malkumba-Coongie Lakes Ramsar Site in central Australia is characterized by extensive terrestrial and freshwater ecosystems. By implementing a Strategic Adaptive Management (SAM) Plan, stakeholders are engaged in setting shared vision and management objectives, with a focus on protecting the ecological character of the site.
The Malkumba-Coongie Lakes Ramsar Site has extensive terrestrial and freshwater ecosystems (largest Ramsar Site in Oceania, 2,178,952 ha, designated in 1987), including freshwater and salt lakes, lignum swamps and river channels in central Australia. It is supplied by Cooper Creek, a free-flowing Lake Eyre Basin river system. The area includes pastoral leases (97% of site grazed, including a regional conservation reserve (35%)) and a National Park (3%), with the largest oil and gas production field in Australia. We developed a Strategic Adaptive Management (SAM) Plan, linking science, monitoring and management of this social-ecological system, involving stakeholders and workshops. This involved developing a shared vision and hierarchy of objectives linked to management actions and identified outputs and outcomes. We exemplify this approach with explicit and measurable end-points (thresholds of potential concern) culminating from low level objectives for fish communities, particularly the alien sleepy cod Oxyeleotris lineolata. We describe this framework, highlighting the benefits in prioritizing management actions and monitoring in collaboration with a diverse range of stakeholders, driving adaptive feedback for learning. The whole approach is aimed at successfully achieving mutually agreed management objectives and the vision to maintain the ecological character of the Malkumba-Coongie Lakes Ramsar Site.

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