queensland parks & wildlife response to keppel bay ... · • keppel bay reefs show high...

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Queensland Parks & Wildlife

Response to Keppel Bay

Floodwaters 2008

Chris Maple, Senior Ranger Rosslyn Bay; &

John Olds, Senior Conservation Officer

Great Barrier Reef

World Heritage Area

• Includes all islands & marine areas up to HWM between Cape York and Baffle Creek– Includes Island National Parks

– Great Barrier Reef Marine Park; &

– GBR Coast Marine Park

Emerald Agreement

• Agreement between

Commonwealth and State

for joint management of

WHA

• Great Barrier Reef Marine

Park Authority responsible

for policy and planning

• Environmental Protection

Agency/Queensland Parks

& Wildlife responsible for

Day to Day Management

Day to Day Management

• Includes:– Natural Resource

Management;

Day to Day Management

• Includes:– Natural Resource

Management;

Day to Day Management

• Includes:– Natural Resource

Management;

Day to Day Management

• Includes:– Natural Resource

Management;

– Compliance;

Day to Day Management

• Includes:– Natural Resource

Management;

– Compliance;

– Education;

Day to Day Management

• Includes:– Natural Resource

Management;

– Compliance;

– Education; &

– Infrastructure

management.

Day to Day Management

• Includes:– Natural Resource

Management;

– Compliance,

– Education; &

– Infrastructure

management.

• 2008 Fitzroy Flood

response is part of

NRM component

DDM response to Keppel Bay

February 2008 flood events

• Logistic support:

included;– Providing vessel

platform support to

JCU, AIMS & CSIRO;

DDM response to Keppel Bay

February 2008 flood events

• Logistic support:

included;– Providing vessel

platform support to

JCU, AIMS & CSIRO;

&

– Staff & equipment

storage and transfer

DDM response to Keppel Bay

February 2008 flood events

• Surface

monitoring

– Opportunistic

mapping of

plume extent

– Reported to

FBA/GBRMPA

‘Flood Updates’

DDM response to Keppel Bay

February 2008 flood events

• Aerial monitoring

– Spatial mapping of

plume extent

during flood peaks

in Keppel Bay

DDM response to Keppel Bay

February 2008 flood events

• Aerial monitoring– Spatial mapping of

plume extent during flood peaks in Keppel Bay

– Reported to FBA/GBRMPA ‘Flood Updates’

– Complemented satellite monitoring during cloudy days

DDM response to Keppel Bay

February 2008 flood events

Reef observationsDespite high turbidity and very low salinities;

Keppel Bay reefs (except southernmost ones) showed minimal or no signs of flood-induced mortality

Confirmed through ongoing AIMS monitoring

Western Miall Island

29 Feb 2008

Peak Island

29 Feb 2008

Halfway Island

29 Feb 2008

Barren Island

29 Feb 2008

Where to now?• Keppel Bay reefs show

high resilience relative to rest of GBR

– Means that corals have high tolerance and high recoverability characteristics

– Combined GBRMPA/EPA approach to Climate Change (Coral Bleaching Response Plan)

– DDM contributing to resilience component of Keppel Project

Keppel Project: Resilience component• Includes:

– Bathymetry mapping of key habitats

– Mapping and classifying coral coverage in key habitats

– Collecting anchoring data

– Determining most resilient reefs

– Implementing any protection as determined by community

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