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| This decades-old Murray cod was among millions of fish which died in mass kills in December and January in the Darling river |
The viability of a key river that feeds into Australia's biggest water system is under threat if poor conditions that killed millions of fish are not improved within six months, scientists warned Monday.
The
management of the Murray-Darling River system, which stretches thousands of
kilometres across several states and supplies Australia's food bowl, has been
under close scrutiny following three mass fish deaths in December and January.
Authorities
said millions of fish died in the Darling River events, blamed on low water
flow and oxygen levels in the river as well as possibly toxic algae.
Leading
scientists who studied the three bouts of kills said that while a severe
drought plaguing inland eastern Australia contributed to the deaths, there were
also "serious deficiencies in governance and management" of the river
network.
"Our
review of the fish kills found there isn't enough water in the Darling system
to avoid catastrophic outcomes," said Craig Moritz, chair of the
independent expert panel commissioned by the opposition Labor Party to
investigate the deaths.
He said an
analysis of rainfall and river flow data over recent decades points to
"excess water extraction upstream" in the agricultural regions of
Queensland and New South Wales (NSW) states.
If urgent
steps are not taken within six months to increase the flow of water, the expert
report said, the "viability of the Darling" as well as the
communities that depend on it for their livelihoods would be under threat.
Authorities
in 2014 launched a vast Murray–Darling Basin Plan to manage water sharing and
usage along the length of the system, which runs through five states and
territories.
Last month
a Royal Commission launched by South Australia state accused officials of
"maladministration", "negligence" and "unlawful"
actions in implementing the plan.
Environmental
activists and many residents living along the lower reaches of the
Murray-Darling system have put much of the blame on abusive water extraction
for irrigation by agribusinesses, including major cotton farms in Queensland
and NSW.
But
officials of Australia's conservative federal government have focused on the
impacts of prolonged drought and an unprecedented heat wave during this
southern summer as the primary causes of low water flow in the Darling River.
Federal
Environment Minister Melissa Price said Monday that "significant
rainfall" was needed to alleviate the poor water quality and that release
of more water into the system from upstream dams would not improve the
conditions.

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