CONNECTING WATERWAYS FOR SUSTAINABLE RECREATIONAL FISHING

Overview

This project is identifying man-made barriers that are impacting connectivity between freshwater and estuarine fish habitats in the Barron, Daintree and Mossman catchments. At least one high priority barrier will be mitigated.

Background

The focus catchments are a diversity hotspot for diadromous freshwater fish species – adults spawn in estuaries and the juvenile fish migrate upstream to wetlands where they mature into adults. Barriers like weirs, drains and culverts that stop fish moving between these habitats, are a threat to the health of recreationally and ecologically important fish stocks.

Solutions

  • Developing a GIS-based inventory of all potential fish barriers
  • Ground-truthing and site-assessing the inventory’s top 100 priority barriers
  • Habitat augmentation of at least one barrier
  • Fish barrier assessment training to build local capacity to undertake citizen science monitoring
  • Ongoing monitoring regime established

Factsheets

Location

Lower Barron, Mossman and Daintree catchments.

Partners

This project will engage with landholders, recreational fishers, landcare groups and Traditional Owners.

Funders

This two-year project will run until June 2023 and is funded through the Australian Government’s National Landcare Program.

national landcare program

RELATED NEWS

Common fish barriers

Common fish barriers

Biodiversity Template 1
What happens when barriers prevent fish getting where they need to go?
Read More
Mahogany glider survey

Mahogany glider survey

Biodiversity Template 1
A tropical island with ideal habitat for this endangered glider is a new focus in recovery efforts.
Read More
Lowland rainforest listed as endangered

Lowland rainforest listed as endangered

Template 1 Biodiversity
Lowland Tropical Rainforest of the Wet Tropics has been listed as endangered...
Read More
1 30 31 32 33 34 44