Estuary Management Planning
Narrawallee
inlet - 2004
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Narrawallee Inlet | 2004 Indicator description
Narrawallee Inlet
Environmental Overview
Environmental issues
Environmental pressures
Natural Resources Management
Plan
Estuary Management Programs
Environmental Overview
Narrawallee Inlet has
four main tributaries – Croobyar, Yackungarrah and Currowar Creeks and Garrads
Lagoon. The three creeks rise in the escarpment forests, within 30km of the coast,
and wind through agricultural lands to the estuary containing a floodplain and
wetland complex.
Most of the land
surrounding the Narrawallee village is bushland, reserved for public recreation,
environmental protection or scenic protection. The 8 sq km catchment of the
inlet includes the Narrawallee suburb, part of the town of Milton, large areas
of agricultural soils, native forest recently included in the Morton National
Park, native forest in private ownership and significant areas of rural
residential development. Approximate resident population for the catchment in
2001 was 500.
The inlet is a mature
estuarine complex open to the sea. It has an apparently very stable entrance. A
large sand shoal is located on the southern shore, and the channel runs
permanently along the northern side. A shallow channel extends along the
southern side of this shoal. Storms can send large waves into the inlet, and
deposit large volumes of marine sand. Floods and tides rework and redistribute
this sand within the inlet, shoal and beach systems. The bed of the inlet is
Crown Land.
The inlet is a place
where marine and terrestrial processes interact to produce a particularly
sensitive and complex coastal environment. The wetland complex and the
low-lying farmland represent an infilled drowned valley system that developed to
this stage prior to human involvement. Since European settlement, a variety of
works including weirs, walls, infilling and channels have reduced the extent of
the estuary to that which exists today.
The estuary in Croobyar
Creek ends in a weir that restricts saltwater intrusion into the low lying
farmland, as well as providing a source of fresh water for dairying and grazing
purposes.
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Environmental
attributes
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The estuarine wetlands
in both the Narrawallee Creek Nature Reserve and on private lands are in a
near natural state. 196 ha are protected under SEPP 14. Most of the
wetlands and adjoining buffer areas are zoned for environment protection.
The estuary has well vegetated foreshore for most of its length, of grey and
river mangroves, swamp oaks and bangalay communities;
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Narrawallee Creek
Nature Reserve has been included on the register of the National Estate due to
the diversity and quality of its habitats including mangroves, high dune
forest, salt and freshwater lagoons;
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The Narrawallee Inlet
represents a clean and largely unchanged estuarine eco-system involving sea
grass beds and an apparent abundance of aquatic species. It shows only minor
modification of habitat with few water quality problems. The banks are
largely stable with only a few instances of undercutting or headcutting.
Water quality testing at the entrance consistently shows excellent water
quality as a result of the tidal exchange;
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The creek system of
Narrawallee Inlet and their catchments support a large variety range of
ecological communities, some of which are relatively undisturbed. These
are important from a conservation perspective as well as an attractive
attribute of the area for many residents and visitors; and
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Despite extensive
clearing, a few moist and dry subtropical rainforest pockets remain at and
around the Yatteyattah Nature Reserve, as well as on the steeper slops around
Milton and in some escarpment gullies. Some assessment of these remnants has
been done and they appear to be stable.
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Environmental issues
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Shoalhaven City
Council monitoring has revealed poor water quality in the lower reaches of
Croobyar, Yackungarrah and Currowar Creeks during the past 10 years at the
sampling locations. This has largely been due to high inputs of bacteria,
sediment and nutrients, particularly after rainfall events. Testing
revealed high numbers of faecal coliforms in the upper catchment, and low
oxygen levels, which are indicative of high organic loading from surface
runoff. Yackungarrah Creek was reported as having the lowest water
quality result for any Shoalhaven waterway in the 1997/98 State of the
Environment Report, indicating the impact of agricultural and rural
residential uses. All of these water quality indicators can have serious
impacts on the aquatic life in the freshwater creeks, and possibly in the
upper reaches of the estuary. These may include direct kills as well as
the reduction or significant changes in the habitat of native species;
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Much of the riparian
vegetation from the freshwater ecosystem has been removed on the agricultural
lands. The creek banks are largely unfenced and are grazed by cattle.
Weirs restrict the movement of species up Croobyar Creek. No detailed
assessment has been done of the freshwater ecology;
-
An infestation of the
invasive marine seaweed Caulerpa taxifolia
has been identified in the
inlet immediately upstream of the shoals. This presents a serious
threat to the biological diversity (through smothering of aquatic vegetation),
amenity and economic viability of local tourist industries that depend on
healthy coastal waterways in the Shoalhaven. This area has been closed to
fishing to reduce its distribution to other areas. More information can be
found on the NSW Fisheries web site -
http://www.fisheries.nsw.gov.au ;
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Forest red gum
communities, which originally covered the bulk of the Milton farming lands,
are now surviving intact in only a small number of locations;
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Several areas of
localised erosion and undercutting of the bank exist along the lower reaches
of the estuary. Undercutting of the reserve above and below the boat ramp has
occurred where there is minimal foreshore vegetation. An active headcut exists
on agricultural lands below Garrads Lane;
-
Some areas of wetlands
have been grazed or damaged by vandalism. There has been some damage to
foreshore trees in an attempt to obtain views by some residents; and
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Privet and lantana are the most significant weeds on the fringes of native
bushland and threaten native plant communities.
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Environmental
pressures
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Upstream land
management practices in the catchment that may influence water quality include
(not in order of importance): clearing, residential development; dairy and pig
sheds; grazing and degrading of riparian areas; increases in the area of hard
surfaces; poor road and driveway maintenance and construction;
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Narrawallee has 650
hectares of soils with a high probability of acid sulfate layers. These
are the farming lands and wetlands at the top of the estuary. There is some
potential for acid sulfate pollution of the inlet from three areas of farmland
that were previously wetlands, as well as from drain maintenance;
-
Grazing of cattle
occurs along most of the riparian zones and in some foreshore and wetland
areas. This is not necessarily on a permanent basis. Increased creek bank
fencing has been encouraged in an attempt to ameliorate this pressure.
Creeks through the agricultural lands have either minimal native
vegetation, or only a thin band;
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Any future expansion
of Narrawallee suburb has the potential to reduce areas of high habitat value;
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There is some
community pressure to dredge the shoals inside the entrance of the inlet in an
attempt to improve boating access and to flush the inlet. Narrawallee
Inlet, however, is a small estuary, would still have good flushing even if the
entrance were significantly narrower. Dredging would be likely to affect
the stability of the narrow foreshore reserve; and
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Introduced animals,
including foxes, domestic and feral cats and dogs, black rats and rabbits,
threaten native animal and plant populations.
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Natural Resources
Management Plan
Shoalhaven City Council,
New South Wales and Commonwealth Government agencies, and the community have
prepared and adopted a Natural Resources Management Strategy for Narrawallee
Inlet on the 25 June 2002. It acknowledges past environmental management, attempts to
integrate current programs and proposes some new approaches. This is being done
to safeguard the ecology of the waterways and their catchments, to balance
potentially competing uses and to provide a framework for future planning.
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Estuary Management Programs
Key implementation
actions in progress or completed in partnership with Shoalhaven City Council and
Department of Infrastructure, Planning and Natural Resources (DIPNR) and funded
under the following programs include:
Estuary Program
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2003 Narrawallee Inlet Foreshore Erosion Study and Concept
Design $15000;
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2003 Inlet Reserve Rehabilitation Plan;
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2003-2004 Erosion Remediation Detailed design and REF;
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2003-2004 implementation of Bushfire Asset Protection Zones
for the village;
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2004-2005 Erosion remediation construction $80,000; and
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2004-2005 Catchment Stormwater Review $10,000
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Surface Water Quality Narrawallee Inlet
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