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19 May 2025
The research focused on improving understanding of low flow requirements of environmental assets and values in a climate change context and developing a conservation prioritisation method to identify priority locations for future management decisions.
This study explored the ability to develop reference curves to describe exemplar age class distributions for key floodplain tree species.
Understanding the characteristics of tree populations, such as their density, age structure, rates of recruitment (germination and establishment of new trees), growth, and mortality (death rates), are important to understanding the likelihood that tree populations are sustainable. This includes understanding the role of these processes on age class distributions. Developing reference curves – tools that help to define the acceptable limits of parameters such as age class distributions – helps us to determine the likelihood that tree populations are sustainable or may require management intervention to promote recruitment or old growth for example.
28 October 2024
Annual Reports of the Chief Executive to parliament on the performance of the Murray–Darling Basin Authority.
24 October 2024
The Murray–Darling Basin Authority (MDBA) is organised in 4 divisions. Branches are organised within these divisions to deliver the organisation's business and operational priorities.
4 October 2024
The following is the Murray–Darling Basin Authority's (MDBA) statement of legal services expenditure for the financial year 2023–24.
2 August 2024
A suite of options to improve the movement of water through the Barmah–Millewa Reach of the Murray River.
1 August 2024
The Barmah Forest in Victoria and the Millewa Forest in New South Wales include wetlands of international significance. Report cards are updated every year.
1 August 2024
Monitoring reports from the Barmah–Millewa Forest, one of The Living Murray icon sites.
A renewed agreement between WaterNSW and Murray Irrigation Limited (MIL) will help to move water around the Barmah Choke for the 2024–25 water year.