Why the Lower Darling?
The Lower Darling River is significant for native fish in the Murray-Darling Basin. Iconic species such as Golden perch, Murray cod, Silver perch and Freshwater catfish, as well as a number of important small-bodied native fish species, live in this special river. The Darling River supports the breeding and recruitment (growth and survival) of fish, with Golden perch adults, for example, spawning upstream so that larvae and young fish drift downstream. As they drift they grow, so by the time they reach the Menindee Lakes, there are juveniles and adults able to repopulate, both in an upstream and downstream direction. Recent science demonstrates that Golden perch in the Murray system (from Echuca down to the Lower Lakes in South Australia) are often those that began life in the Darling River.
The Lower Darling River Murray cod population is particularly important for the recovery of adjacent populations in the mid and lower Murray River system that in recent years, have suffered severe declines with blackwater fish deaths across thousands of river kilometres.
Recovering the Lower Darling
NSW Department of Primary Industry, in collaboration with other State and Commonwealth agencies and organisations, are now looking at management actions to protect and recover native fish populations in the short term (2019-20), as well as when conditions improve. These actions include:
Short term:
- Water quality and fish monitoring
- Creation of artificially aerated refuge areas in the Lower Darling
- Relocation of fish from diminishing pools to better quality waterbodies