Australian Natural Resources Atlas

Natural Resource Topics

Water resources - Quality - Victoria

Location map of VIC

Victoria

What are the main pressures on surface water quality and the key findings?

Pressures on Surface Water Quality

Main findings: Location of Water Quality problems and trends

Despite water quality being generally fair across the State, total nitrogen and phosphorus concentrations in most basins continually exceeded guidelines. Only two less developed basins in the east of the State, the Snowy and the Mitchell did not record exceedances for both nitrogen and total phosphorus. Victorian nutrient exceedance guidelines for nitrogen are currently being reviewed to better reflect the variability of monitored systems. Nutrient trend analyses were limited by the available data but where available, tended to indicate decreasing total nitrogen for northern and eastern basins and increases for a number of south coast basins including the Hopkins, Tambo and South Gippsland. A mixture of increasing and decreasing trends were observed for total phosphorus. South coast basins including the Portland coast, Hopkins, Otway and South Gippsland showed an increasing trend while the Latrobe and the Maribyrong showed decreasing trends.

Turbidity exceedances were widespread across Victoria with only eastern basins including the Latrobe, Thomson, Mitchell and the Snowy not exceeding turbidity guidelines. Turbidity was observed to increase in several basins within the Murray-Darling Drainage Division in the north of the State and within the Maribyrong and South Gippsland basins in the south. Decreasing turbidity was recorded in the Latrobe and Wimmera-Avon basins.

A significant portion of the State's basins also recorded exceedances of salinity guidelines, including most western basins in the Murray Darling and South-East Coast Drainage Divisions. Four of these basins also showed salinity to be increasing while basins in the central north and south including the Maribyrong, Barwon, Campaspe and Latrobe showed salinity to be decreasing.

Only a few basins had pH guideline exceedances including the Campaspe, Wimmera-Avon and the Thomson, however decreasing pH trends (increasing acidity) were recorded for most eastern basins while several central southern basins recorded increases in pH (increasing alkalinity).

Summaries presented within State and Territory reporting sections are from project reports compiled by State and Territory agencies. For further information contact the Victorian Department of Natural Resources and Environment (DNRE) or the Victorian Environment Protection Agency

Description of water quality monitoring programs

Organisations Involved

There are two main programs, rural monitoring and metropolitan monitoring.

Management Objectives

Sampling Methods

Summaries presented within State and Territory reporting sections are excepts from project reports compiled by State and Territory agency personnel. To down load full project reports go to State and Territory project reports. For further information contact the Victorian Department of Natural Resources and Environment (DNRE)

Map of number of measurement stations per drainage basin for VIC

The following table lists the coverage of water quality monitoring in Victoria. Basins that had no stations used in this assessment of water quality monitoring are not listed in this table.

Drainage BasinNumber of stations used in water quality reportingNumber of attributes for which exceedance analyses could be determinedNumber of attributes for which trend analyses could be determined
VIC184N/AN/A
Avoca River455
Barwon River755
Broken River555
Bunyip River565
Campaspe River655
East Gippsland755
Glenelg River1055
Goulburn River1655
Hopkins River655
Kiewa River455
Lake Corangamite255
Latrobe River855
Loddon River955
Mallee255
Maribyrnong River655
Millicent Coast155
Mitchell River355
Moorabool River455
Murray-Riverina732
Otway Coast1155
Ovens River955
Portland Coast355
Snowy River955
South Gippsland855
Tambo River655
Thomson River755
Upper Murray River755
Werribee River855
Wimmera - Avon Rivers855
Yarra River865

Click on the basin name in the table to view a water quality report for that basin.

What is the extent of the water quality monitoring coverage?

Reported Monitoring Coverage

The Victorian Water Quality Monitoring Network monitors 180 sites covering 27 of the state's 30 basins. The monitoring coverage for the State is therefore very good covering all drainage divisions and most basins. Ongoing program development seeks to ensure appropriate spatial coverage and river representation across the State. More sites are currently located in the upper - middle reaches of rivers than lower catchment areas.

Exceedance analyses were possible for five variables: salinity, turbidity total nitrogen, total phosphorus and pH in all monitored basins and trend analyses possible for all variables in most basins. Monitoring station density and resultant basin coverage was too low to characterise water quality within a number of smaller coastal basins and western and northern Murray-Darling Drainage Division Basins.

Application of findings, information gaps and recommendations

Application of findings

Findings of the Audit surface water quality assessment:

Information Gaps

Recommendations

  1. State monitoring sites be extended to include sites in pristine, undisturbed areas and the lower reaches of catchments.
  2. Regional specific objectives and monitoring programs be progressively developed to better accommodate regional variations in water quality and management objectives.

Summaries presented within State and Territory reporting sections are excepts from project reports compiled by State and Territory agency personnel. To down load full project reports go to State and Territory project reports. For further information contact the Victorian Department of Natural Resources and Environment (DNRE)

Further Information

Key

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