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Capitalising on the wettest conditions for years to support native fish, waterbirds, native vegetation and river flows in the Basin are a key focus for watering priorities in 2017–18.
This report summarises the findings for one part of the northern basin review: an assessment of the ability of various water recovery scenarios to achieve environmental outcomes.
5 October 2016
Goondiwindi now has its own weather station thanks to a Murray–Darling Basin Authority (MDBA) project that gives locals a full picture of conditions so they can plan for the future.
4 July 2016
Supporting native animals such as the silver perch, waterbird habitat and wetland vegetation are a key focus for watering activities in 2016–17.
24 June 2016
The Barmah–Millewa Forest bush bird surveys in 2016-17 identified a total of 61 woodland bird species in the survey plots. Species were recorded from both the survey plots and the adjoining habitat. There were 1221 individual birds recorded from across twenty sites in the Barmah–Millewa Forest.
2 February 2016
26 November 2015
We used inundation mapping to assess the impacts of various flow heights on land and infrastructure. This report describes the method used to develop inundation mapping and assess effects of flows.
18 November 2015
The specifications for spatial data is available to help you prepare datasets and metadata that meet the MDBA's data standards.
31 October 2015
This report examined the effectiveness of using waterbirds as an indicator of wetland and river health in the Murray-Darling Basin.
1 October 2012
On 29 June 2012, the Murray–Darling Basin Ministerial Council requested that the MDBA complete a ‘relaxed-constraints’ model scenario with a Basin-wide reduction in diversions of 3200 GL/y.