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Eutrophication: bloom and burst
Agriculture has been very successful in growing food for
an ever-increasing population. This success is largely the
result of widespread use of synthetic fertilisers.
In Western Australia, very little geological activity has
taken place for millions of years. The soils of Australia
are ancient compared with those of other areas of the world.
They are the product of millions of years of erosion and leaching
and are, as a consequence, low in fertility. It has been essential
for farmers to apply phosphorus to the soil to obtain profitable
crop yields; in fact, to obtain any yield at all on some soil
types. Some of the phosphorus, along with other nutrients,
is leached out of the soil and finds its way into rivers and
estuaries.
The term eutrophication refers to the ecological changes
that result from the overloading of water bodies with nutrients.
Nitrogen and phosphorous are the most important of the nutrients
causing eutrophication. Algal blooms need phosphorous and
nitrogen to occur. Phosphorous is the main nutrient causing
algal blooms in most inland waters in the south west of WA.
Generally, sandy soils do not hold nutrients and allow direct
leaching of dissolved nutrients into watercourses. Sandy soils
that have been artificially enriched with phosphorous can
contribute to the eutrophication of a wetland or estuary.
In other areas where soils have high clay content the nutrients
are bound to the clay particles. Soil erosion plays a leading
role in eutrophication when the nutrient enriched clay particles
are washed into watercourses as sediment and release the attached
nutrients.
Many
estuaries, rivers, reservoirs and lakes around Australia suffer
from eutrophication. The Select Committee into Land Conservation
(Legislative Assembly, 1991a) reported that in the south west
of Western Australia only seven estuaries out of twenty two
had low nutrient levels. The effects of eutrophication have
increased since the early 1970's, including:
- The fouling of beaches with macroalgae;
- The loss of important habitat;
- Algal blooms in river and wetland systems and a decline
in water quality; and
- Significant losses of wild life, including large fish
kills, mortality of entire ecosystem components and loss
of some ecosystem functions.
The Peel-Harvey estuary, Cockburn Sound, Whitford's lagoon,
Denmark's Wilson Inlet and Albany's Princess Royal and Oyster
Harbours are all examples of waters in Western Australia that
are affected eutrophication.
The Peel-Harvey estuary
The Peel-Harvey estuary is one of the largest along the Western
Australian coastline. It stretches from the Harvey River delta
to the Mandurah Ocean Channel and holds up to 150 million
cubic metres of water. Although the estuary has a 133 square
kilometre surface area it is quite shallow and rarely reaches
over 2 metres in depth. It receives water from Serpentine,
Murray and Harvey rivers. In addition 2000 kilometres of drains
from the surrounding catchment area discharge into the estuary.
In a wet winter, a million cubic metres (a million tonnes)
of water flows into the estuary. In a dry winter the flow
is around a quarter of a million cubic metres, which is still
a significant amount of water.
The estuary is separated from the ocean by a series of dunes
and limestone. White sandy beaches stretch along the coastline.
Offshore, the seabed is a combination of reef and sand supporting
a variety of marine algae, fish and small invertebrates such
as crustaceans and worms.
Since the 1950s there has been a six-fold increase in the
amount of phosphorus reaching the estuary. This extra quantity
of an otherwise scarce element causes an algal bloom: the
rapid growth of one type of alga. Decay processes involving
respiration take place when algae populations crash and die.
Respiration removes dissolved oxygen from the water and results
in the death of aquatic organisms. It also produced the offensive
odours familiar to people living in Mandurah.
What can we do about eutrophication?
Phytoplankton
blooms and excessive growth of macroalgae which have been
observed since the 1960's have had detrimental effects on
the estuarine ecology and human use of the estuary. A channel
was cut between the estuary and the ocean to improve flushing
and water circulation within the Peel-Harvey estuary. Improving
the tidal exchange between the ocean and the estuary resulted
in a more constant saline environment in the estuary, improved
water quality and has made conditions unfavourable for the
toxic phytoplankton Nodularia which flourishes in fresh to
brackish water conditions.
Flushing nutrients to the ocean
The
principal aim of constructing the Dawesville Channel was to
increase the flushing of nutrients from the estuary into the
ocean. Once the channel was open (April 1994), it was necessary
to monitor the movement of the estuary water into the ocean.
The Department of Transport's nutrient monitoring program
shows that water leaves the estuary and forms a clearly defined
plume, extending approximately 2 kilometres offshore and 3
kilometres north of the channel.
In the first year following the opening of the channel, 100
to 120 tonnes of total phosphorous and 900 to 1100 tonnes
of total nitrogen were flushed from the catchment into the
ocean via the Peel-Harvey estuary. This is approximately the
amount of nutrient that would normally enter the ocean during
average rainfall years, when the only entrance to the ocean
was the Mandurah Channel. A monitoring program is being undertaken
to determine what effects the higher amounts of nutrients
will have on the ocean environment.
How is the beach changing?
Natural processes of marine sediment movement are quite complex.
In winter, more marine sediment is moved offshore by the winter
storm waves than is deposited onto the beaches. In summer
the opposite is true, with beaches and nearshore banks building
up sediment. In addition some marine sediment moves up and
down the coastline depending on the direction of the currents
in the form of littoral drift.
The challenge for the Peel-Harvey Catchment is to have only
sustainable forms of land use. These will maintain production
and profits but avoid the pollution of the water. Co-operation
of all landholders is needed. Co-ordinating the use of land
by all landholders is required and is called 'integrated catchment
management'. This strategy is the only effective way to deal
with eutrophication problems in the long term. The Dawesville
Cut may have been a solution in the short term but sustainable
land management practices should be adopted to prevent additional
nutrients reaching the ocean. In the case of the Peel-Harvey
estuary, part of the strategy involves modified use of fertilisers.
Farmers are advised when and how much fertiliser to spread
and they are encouraged to use a different, less-soluble phosphate
fertiliser to match phosphorus 'release' with plant growth,
thus reducing the amount of phosphorus reaching the estuary.
The use of Tasmanian bluegum plantations has been proposed
to lower water tables, reducing the volume of water reaching
the estuary and intercepting more of the 'free' phosphorus.
The regulation of certain agricultural industries, such as
piggeries and animal feedlots, can play a role to ensure that
these industries are placed where they will not contribute
to eutrophication. Horticultural landuse zones, where large
amounts of fertiliser are required, needs to be carefully
positioned within the catchment and to have proper nutrient
and irrigation management. Urban development is accompanied
by sewage systems that need careful monitoring. Land capability
studies are carried out to determine where housing development
can proceed without the risk of increased eutrophication.
Land use planning legislation is then implemented to regulate
use.
References:
Davies-Ward, Edwina and Finlayson, Rob (Ed.), (1997) Environment
Western Australia 1997 Draft State of the Environment Report
for Western Australia, Department of Environmental Protection:
Perth, WA.
Legislative Assembly (1991a) Select Committee into Land Conservation
Discussion Paper No. 1, South West Region of WA, Legislative
Assembly: Perth, WA
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