4.4 Article

Assessment of the causes and solutions to the significant 2018-19 fish deaths in the Lower Darling River, New South Wales, Australia

Journal

MARINE AND FRESHWATER RESEARCH
Volume 73, Issue 2, Pages 147-158

Publisher

CSIRO PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1071/MF21038

Keywords

drought; fish deaths; thermal stratification; water resource development

Funding

  1. Minister for Agriculture and Water Resources

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The study examined three significant fish death events that occurred in the Lower Darling River, Australia, from late 2018 to early 2019, attributing the causes to extreme hot and dry climate conditions, stratification and hypoxia in weir pools, and broader climatic, hydrological, and basin management contexts. The observations have implications for future river management, with suggestions made for policy makers and river operators to minimize fish death risks.
In late 2018 to early 2019, three significant fish death events occurred in the Lower Darling River, Australia, with mortality estimates of millions of fish. We examined the proximate and ultimate causes of these events. We determined that not only were the conditions existing at the time a significant contributing factor, but that antecedent conditions, particularly during the period 2010-17, also contributed. The extreme hot and dry climate during 2018, extending into 2019, shaped the conditions that saw a large fish biomass, which had flourished in the Darling River and Menindee Lakes since favourable spawning conditions in 2016, isolated in weir pools, with no means of escaping upstream or downstream. Strong and persistent weir pool stratification created hypoxic conditions in the hypolimnion. A series of sudden cool changes subsequently initiated rapid and sudden mixing of the stratified waters, causing depletion of oxygen throughout the water column and resulting in the fish deaths. The events were also shaped by broader climatic, hydrological and basin management contexts that placed the Lower Darling River at risk of such fish deaths. Our observations have implications for future river management, and we make several suggestions how policy makers and river operators can minimise fish death risks into the future.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.4
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available