Australian Natural Resources Atlas

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Lake Warden, Western Australia. Photo: John Bourke

Lake Warden Case Study Catchment, Western Australia

Lake Warden catchment comprises four sub-catchments that feed the Lake Warden wetlands in southern Western Australia. It is dominated by annual pasture, with the remainder being cropped (approximately 33%) and perennial pasture, remnant vegetation and farm forestry (approximately 10% in total). With its low to medium permeabilities and low to moderate groundwater gradients, the catchment has a low to moderate ability to move groundwater.

It is estimated that 7.5% or 122 500 ha of cleared agricultural land in this catchment is affected by dryland salinity.

Figure 27.Distribution of regional groundwater flow systems in alluvial sediments.
Lake Warden catchment case study area - regional groundwater flow systems in alluvial sediments

Results of groundwater investigations and modelling

The results of the groundwater investigation suggest that groundwater movements through the catchment are slow, and therefore response times to extensive changes in land use are also expected to occur very slowly.

Cross-section of Lake Warden Catchment

Implications

In Lake Warden area, recharge to the confined aquifer is taking place in well-defined areas of the upper parts of the catchment. Controlling recharge in these areas will manage the rise in artesian heads and groundwater discharge in the long term. On the other hand, recharge to the unconfined aquifers that takes place over most of the catchment will be very hard to manage.

Managing the water levels in the numerous lakes in the area through drainage needs to be investigated to assess its viability in controlling the water levels in the shallow aquifers.

A full technical report is available on the Audit's Australian Natural Resources Atlas.

Figure 28.Lake Warden (WA): change of area at different recharge reduction rates - based on current recharge rate (confined aquifer - upper catchment).

Table 24.Lake Warden (WA): change of area at different recharge reduction rates - based on current recharge rate (confined aquifer - upper catchment).

 

Recharge reduction

Year

No change (%)

50%

75%

90%

2000

2

2

2

2

2020

9

4

3

3

2050

26

12

6

4

2100

40

23

11

5

Table 25.Lake Warden (WA): change of area at different recharge reduction rates - based on current recharge rate (unconfined aquifers).

Recharge reduction

No change

50%

75%

90%

Year

(%)

(%)

(%)

(%)

2000

2

2

2

2

2020

27

6

4

4

2050

45

33

7

4

2100

48

38

27

6

Figure 29.Lake Warden (WA): change of area at different recharge reduction rates - based on current recharge rate (unconfined aquifers).

CAPACITY TO CHANGE - Lake Warden case study of dryland salinity and watertable control

Lake Warden catchment, situated near the coastal town of Esperance on the south east coast of Western Australia. Salinity impacts within the Study Area appear mainly on farm land and around important wetlands at Esperance, as well as other low lying waterbodies. At present 8 per cent of the catchment is salinised but this is expanding rapidly and CSIRO believes that, without management, the extent will increase to 45 per cent of the catchment over the next 50 years.

Background

The analysis compared the benefits and costs associated with salinity control in Lake Warden catchment being one of four contrasting case studies (Kamarooka, Upper Billabong, Wanilla). The approach adopted was to take estimates of the physical scale of impacts for each type of damage caused by dryland salinity (e.g. area of agricultural enterprises, number of stream diverters, kilometres of roads affected, number of species affected), and to apply damage functions for each of those types of impact. Data describing the physical scale of impacts have been captured using mainly GIS layers which describe the location of dryland salinity in each case study catchment. The damage functions developed for the purposes of quantifying the economic impacts of dryland salinity are for: agriculture and commercial forestry; roads and rail; urban centres; water users; and environmental values.

Key findings

Lessons learnt from all salinity case studies:

Further Information

the technical reports:

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Table of Contents for the Australian Dryland Salinity Assessment 2000

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