Showing posts with label runoff. Show all posts
Showing posts with label runoff. Show all posts

25.11.23

Australian dolphins have the world’s highest concentrations of ‘forever chemicals’

'Dolphins are the “canary in the coal mine' for coastal ecosystems. Australian dolphins have the world’s highest concentrations of ‘forever chemicals’ (source)

Hepatic concentrations of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) in dolphins from south-east Australia: Highest reported globally. (source)

24.11.23

Toxic Contamination and Dead Mangroves at Boambee Creek

Mural, Solitary Island Coastal Walk, Bonville creek

Recently we observed  'A Cooked Intertidal Ecosystem at Sawtell Beach'. Today's local paper (Coffs Coast News of the Area) reports about 'Dead Mangroves at Boambee Creek'

The Boambee Creek Estuary is just north of Sawtell and south of Coffs Harbour airport. The creek traverses the suburbs of Boambee, Sawtell and Toormina, many roads and highways, industrial estates and resorts till finally it reaches the Pacific ocean.

The shoreline of the Boambee Creek Estuary and Boambee Beach is used as a playground for fishermen, dog owners and SUV owners.

Recently Kirsten Benkendorff (Professor at the National Marine Science Centre, Southern Cross University) and a Gumbaynggirr ranger of the Traditional Owners (Indigenous Protected Area Sea Country program) discovered the dead mangroves and neurotoxic contaminants at Boambee Creek.

"Most of the mangroves were rotting and the mud underneath was black and stinking and no live forms were visible. There was a smell of sulphur and petrol." 

"There was a range of toxic chemicals in the rotting mangrove roots, including carbon disulphide and petrochemicals like naphthalene, furan, xylene and cresol...Many are neurotoxic to the eyes, skin and lung."

"The site is not safe for people or aquatic life." (Coffs Coast News of the Area, 24.11.2023)

Update:

New research led by Southern Cross University has found a cocktail of nasty pesticides in oysters and water from one of the NSW North Coast’s dominant rivers. 12.12.2023
https://www.scimex.org/newsfeed/that-really-shucks-pesticide-pollution-threatens-shellfish-safety 

Pesticide residue from farms and towns is ending up in fresh oysters, 13.12.2023

https://theconversation.com/pesticide-residue-from-farms-and-towns-is-ending-up-in-fresh-oysters-219395

The old camp mural, Coffs Harbour, (no longer exists)dl


16.11.23

A Cooked Intertidal Ecosystem at Sawtell Beach

Along Sawtell beach to the north, just before the Murrays Beach stairs is a big pipe socialising the terrestrial runoff from suburbia. The coastal pollution leads to some rocks on the beach making up the intertidal ecosystem. As a tough rocky interface between the sea, the land and the sky they provided rich pickings for pied oystercatchers and other shorebirds.

Run off pipe with eyes

The eutrophication from land leads to algae blooms covering the intertidal rocks. Green slime smothers the area. Adding the thermal stress of 'the hottest October on record', the intertidal animals, such as barnacles, limpets and tube worms were all cooked.



At the horizon a fisherman is gathering bait.

2.3.17

The Big Blueberry on the North Coast of NSW

The coastline of Spain is known as the ‘Sea of Plastic’ ("Mar de Plástico”) (film)  It is the world’s largest plastic greenhouse complex with 350 square km of fruit and vegetables grown by immigrant  labour for the horticultural industry.

Will the North Coast of NSW become such an industrial plastic wrapped landscape?

This ‘country’ has had 229 years of extractive industries. The extraction and export of natural resources in colonial times and now leads to conflicts with residential areas.

Small scale rural landholdings populate the coast and the hinterland. The commons protects National Parks and reserves to afford biodiversity a home. The interface of nature reserves, human settlement and industrial production is that of conflict. “Residents and council do not know about a blueberry farm development until they are there”. (source)

The high rainfall area has been also ‘discovered’ by multinational agribusiness. Once, some of the Coffs Harbour area was know as the ‘Big Banana’, it seems now the North Coast is being developed into the BIG BLUEBERRY.


The cash crop is grown for export. After the land is cleared (image) and all Australian flora and fauna have been made homeless, the crops are grown with agri-chemicals (pesticide, fungicide etc). Runoff impacts the surrounding areas. The berries and the incorporated water and soil are sent overseas. The legacy remains.

Increased machine noise and traffic impact on residents and remaining wildlife.

The promise of ‘jobs’ reads more like ’The Grapes of Wrath’. It has been found that backpackers and non-English speaking background workers from o.s. are underpaid and exploited. (here, here, here)

The farm workers go, but residents are stuck in a neighbourhood that is becoming an industrial site. The conflict between locals and large corporate agribusiness interests needs attention by the regulatory bodies.

As coastal urbanisation increases, the space and resources shrink. The horticultural industry expands in Bellingen, Boambee Valley, Coffs Coast, Corindi, Crossmaglen, Woolgoolga, Repton, Valla, Valery and Nambucca. At Bruxner Park the views towards Coffs Harbour and the ocean are starting to look like the above plastic netting landscape, white plastic nets are gobbling up the green coastal landscape.

The 21st century could offer a chance to refrain from treating ‘country’ as a BIG QUARRY. A future beyond extraction and exploitation. Care for the commons, the water bodies, soil and biodiversity.

Authorities can regulate and monitor ‘land use’ and prevent abuse in the interest of all.

 
Quotes:
- A meeting at the CWA on Monday, March 13 at 7pm
“Intensive Horticulture is creeping into the Bellinger Valley by stealth and residents across the Shire will gather to discuss largely unmonitored and unregulated development of intensive horticulture as a new plantation has now become evident to worried neighbours from Valery,” Bellingen Environment Centre spokesperson Caroline Joseph said. (source)

- Valla: “There is no visual flow in Deep Creek and still pumping continues" (source)

- Repton: “A key feature of the village is the natural setting, surrounded by the Bongil Bongil National Park and Pine Creek State Forest. The conversion of land zoned R5 to provide for an agricultural development is wholly at odds with the primary objective of the zone.”
Thirty-Two separate chemicals are listed in the NSW Department of Primary Industry’s Blueberry Plant protection Guide 2015-2016 for use on blueberries in NSW to control disease and pests...Of the 32 chemicals approved one third of the chemicals are identified as likely to have a long-lasting, negative off-target impact … most disturbing is that pesticides can have both immediate (acute) effects and long term (chronic) effects on the health of people who are exposed to them. ... (The) main concern is spray drift over to nearby houses whose only water is collected in tanks and consequently we will drink.” (source)

- Woolgoolga: “The development of a blueberry farm near his property further west on Newmans Rd resulted in a reduction of kangaroos in that area.” (source)

Links:
Blueberry farm in the Shire reignites the debate, Bellingen Courier, 28.02.2017
Repton resistance  Bellingen Courier, 29.11.2015 
Like living in a war zone, abc 01.03.2017 
Australian agriculture safeguarding against climate change. Structures for larger-scale growers to cover whole paddocks or orchards. abc 04.03.2017
Warning against the deliberate exploitation of young people and visa holders, Bellingen Courier, 06.03.2017

Updates:
 
Blueberry blues: how the cash crop is causing a contamination crisis in Coffs Harbour, 29.09.2022 The Guardian  
 
Calls for royal commission as report details allegations blueberry farmers pay workers $3 an hour 3.12.2020

 Concerned residents want blueberry farms to need a DA 
“We were shocked to learn that there is no monitoring or compliance required at a local (council) level to clear privately owned,forested land or to establish intensive horticulture plantations and that this concern about unregulated development is being shared across the region,” Bellingen Environment Centre’s Caroline Joseph said... Pine Creek is dying ..." Bellingen Courier, 14.03.2017

Deregulate, deregulate - "Productivity Commission recommends a wide slash of farm red tape, except biosecurity and food safety. It also recommends agricultural land should be used for its highest value, even if that means resource development." abc rural 29.03.2017

"Europe's Dirty Little Secret: Moroccan Slaves and a 'Sea of Plastic' " or landscapes a perennial plastic greenhouses, Ecowatch 2015
 
Marine scientists fingerprint sources of nitrogen on the Coffs coast. Nearly all creeks with agriculture (blueberry, macadamia) and urban land use have (sewage) water quality issues. Bellingen Courier, 16.09.2020
 


Images:
Greenhouses of the Campo de Dalías, Almería Province, Spain , NASA’s Earth Observatory
Organic blueberries
The March of Business, Bellingen graffiti 
 
More images:

Mar del Plastico, Bernhard Lang

22.2.16

Freshwater Ecosystems and Cattle

"Today it's simply socially unacceptable to let stock in rivers; people view it in the same way as it's unacceptable to smoke in restaurants"  Conservation group raises alarm over river protection, 22.02.2016  

Image:
Bellingen graffiti: Cattle standing in the Bellinger river

Livestock grazing of riparian vegetation #1

27.7.15

Sewage discharge and shellfish don't mix. The Bellinger-Kalang rivers.

"One of the more pervasive aspects of European settlement was the pollution of the air and water." (source)
"The indications are that we will not have, inside the Bellinger-Kalang, an oyster industry within the next two years...” (source)

"The Aborigines on the coastal regions feasted on oysters and shell beds can be found in the many kitchen middens along the coast. Some of these middens have been carbon-dated to ten thousand years." (source)

Oyster growers on the NSW Mid North Coast are going to grow Sydney Rock Oysters in land-based tanks now to control water quality. "The Bellinger River was closed for 270 days last year due to heavy rainfall." (source)

Along the Bellinger River catchment and the Kalang River dense settlements sprawl along that are not on any sewer system. The majority of the rural blocks are on an on-site sewage management system (OSMS).

In 2008 sewage bacteria really hit the filter feeding oyster beds. "The NSW Food Authority closed the Kalang River at Urunga in August while a search was made for norovirus, which causes gastroenteritis in humans." (source)

Sewage discharge and shellfish don't mix
"The Bellingen Shire Council says septic systems in the river catchment have been identified as a possible source of the pollution...One of the potential contamination sources are privately operated onsite sewage management systems." (source)



Aquaculture farmers have been waiting for seven years for the Kalang River to reopen to oyster harvesting. "Protracted river testing, analysis and meetings began with riverside septics found to be high on the list of culprits, especially on Newry Island and along Urunga’s Atherton Dr." (source). Additionally the "Urunga sewage treatment plant, holiday cabins, two caravan parks adjacent to the river." were also mentioned as sources of contamination. (source)

After the endemic totem of the river, the Bellinger River turtle has been pushed into extinction, the question of water quality and river health is an acute one for the entire catchment.

Updates:
Dairy growth in north-west Tasmania causing concern for oyster farmers: effluent run-off from farms. abc 13.08.2015


Images:
Beert, Osias, Still life with oysters, c. 1610
Bellingen tiles

4.3.15

100 Bellinger River turtles have been found dead or dying


(This post has developed into a sporadically updated ’chronology’ of the demise of the Bellinger River Snapping Turtle (Myuchelys georgesi). The river health reveals low dissolved oxygen, degradation of native riparian vegetation and high phosphate levels in the critical reptile habitat.)

100 300 350 400 426 Bellinger River turtles have been found dead or dying in the Bellinger River. Their "eyes, sinus, brain and vascular system have been affected." They have "severe internal symptoms including major organ damage." Many were blind and malnourished.


The Bellinger River Emydura (Emydura macquarii) Recovery Plan states the following threats:

"Water pollution and increased river sediment load resulting from activities including logging of native forests in the catchment upstream of the population and grazing and agricultural activities upstream and in the vicinity of the population;

construction of bridges and fords upstream and in the vicinity of the population;


extraction of river sand and gravel upstream and in the vicinity of the population; and

line fishing."


S o m e   o f   t h e   t i m e l i n e:  (u p d a t e d)

06.03.2017 Coffscoast Advocate,  21 Critically endangered Bellinger River Snapping Turtles have hatched in a captive breeding project. The offspring will be used to rebuilding the population which was wiped out 90% in 2015. But is their habitat, the Bellinger River catchment now less degraded?

07.11.2015 The Bellingen Courier,  "Australian turtles have existed for 50 million years, but in less than 200 years of European settlement they have been driven to the brink of extinction." Go fetch some data on freshwater turtles dead or alive..

30.09.2015 The Bellingen Courier, "The Bellinger River Snapping Turtle is functionally extinct, meaning that without human intervention there would be no hope", Dr Ricky Spencer, Western Sydney University’s School of Science and Health and Hawkesbury Institute for the Environment. Video
-  In more detail: Mating season key as endangered turtles recover from mystery virus, via @emydura5

15.09.2016 The Bellingen Courier,  Bello youth to investigate the degradation of the Bellinger River. After the usual fund raising and a lot of song&dance, young citizen science has found that:
"The river health reveals low dissolved oxygen, poor riparian zone health and high phosphate levels in critical turtle habitat." (source)

09.05.2016 The Bellingen Courier, To prevent the extinction of the Bellinger River Snapping Turtle (Myuchelys georgesi) help comes from far afield - the Abu Dhabi's species conservation fund. The Mohamed Bin Zayed Fund will help to conserve the Australian threatened and endangered species. Research will address certain points about the reptiles' demise.

"However the significant number of dead turtles suggests an inability for the Bellinger River Snapping Turtle to adapt and suggests that something is very wrong with the state of the river." (source) The reduced ecosystem biodiversity is in the hands of the local population...

The recovery of the imperilled Bellinger River Snapping Turtle, Myuchelys georgesi, Mohamed bin Zayed Species project number 162512755


14.03.2016 The Bellingen Courier, One year after the mysterious mass mortality event survey participants trapped and tagged some surviving Bellinger River Snapping Turtles in the Bellinger and Kalang Rivers "although the number of adults found was extremely low"

22.12.2015 The Bellingen Courier,  The mass extinction event of the Bellinger River Snapping Turtle puts Bellingen water quality on the map internationally.

16.11.2015 The Bellingen Courier,  More on logging and clear-felling in the Bellingen Valley catchment area and a culture of silence:
“The NSW Environmental Protection Agency has recently announced a pathetic $15,000 dollar fine for Forestry Corporation’s botched clear felling operation on steep slopes at Tuckers Nob State Forest adjacent to the Never Never River Catchment in late January 2015...Regarding the death of the Georgei snapping river turtles and any relationship between the trashing of the Never Never and the turtle deaths, there has been a rigorous attempt to stop any serious community discourse about the state and condition of the river when the turtles died and all government departments have consistently blamed a “mystery turtle virus"…This neatly removes any responsibility from any Government Department either Forestry Corporation NSW the EPA or the Roads and Maritime Authority who were working at Gordon’s Cutting where a large mass of dead turtles were found."

10.11.2015 The Bellingen Courier,  The turtles were “found to be suffering from an unusual and consistent pattern of severe inflammatory lesions… A novel virus was identified as the likely cause of the outbreak…”  The public is still kept in the dark about the pathogen type.
Dr Spencer: “The Bellinger River snapping turtle – a species over two million years old – was in healthy numbers in January this year, but by March it was close to extinction.. Turtles are top predators and major scavengers and if they disappear like they have in the Bellinger River, then water quality will be affected.”

3.11.2015
The Bellingen Courier, Construction work at Manns Bridge, Darkwood bumps into an endangered species. The giant barred frog halts the excavation work. But already "the machinery has been washed down in chlorine.."
"As a component of such works council is required by legislation to undertake environmental assessments and prepare an environmental management plan prior to the commencement of works. In addition to these requirements as a result of the Bellinger Snapping turtle mortality the Office of Environment and Heritage (OEH) has established a decontamination procedure for all equipment working near the waterways to reduce the risk of spreading pathogens to other ecosystems in the catchment. Council includes this practice when undertaking works near these waterways."


20.10.2015 Coffs Coast Advocate, The DPI published a report on the mass death event of the turtles. The Bellinger River Snapping Turtle Mortality Event 2015 Epidemiology report. "The turtle disease event may be symptomatic of environmental changes with a series of floods late last year and earlier this year."

24.09.2015 DPI alert: Enhanced surveillance for disease in turtles PDF. “A disease syndrome” has affected the turtles. "They were found dead or beached on banks or emaciated with swollen inflamed eyes and lids. On post mortem examination, there have been gross changes to the eyes, with extension in some animals into the sinus and brain. Changes have also been seen in the liver, kidney, heart and spleen, with varying degrees of inflammation. These effects appear to have occurred over approximately 4-10 days."
Human leisure activities along the 60 kilometre section of the Bellinger River and biosecurity: PDF

21.09.2015 Coffs Coast Advocate, There will be searches for Bellinger River Snapping Turtle survivors in the coming weeks. They will also check if other turtles have been affected by the recently identified virus that remains unknown for the public.
No information can be found whether the home of the turtle/s, the Bellinger River (catchment), has undergone any audits for aquatic ecosystem integrity or improvements...

Bellinger River Snapping Turtle, Myuchelys georgesi -
proposed  c r i t i c a l l y   e n d a n g e r e d   s p e c i e s  listing (PDBellRiverSnapTurtle.pdf 59 KB) - On public exhibition Friday 28 August 2015 – 23/10/2015
Point 9 of the PDF has more on the taxonomy of the turtle and the mortality event of 426 turtles. Point 10 is on the habitat degradation and removal or degradation of riparian vegetation. The reference section has many links. 08.09.2015

02.09.2015 abc The mystery virus killing rare freshwater turtles has been identified, but the virus remains a mystery to the public. "There have been no live turtles seen in the river since the initial mortality incident." Bellinger Shire Council


31.08.2015 The Bellingen Courier Sun, Breakthrough news after nearly a year: It is a (nameless) virus. "A single causative agent was responsible."
But why did the Bellinger River's snapping turtle get the virus?


Ro McFarlane, Patterns of Ecological Change and Emerging Infectious Disease in the Australasian Region, PDF
"A series of transdisciplinary studies is reviewed that test the hypothesis that specific ecological change accounts for a significant component of the rise in emerging infectious diseases (EIDs) in the Australasian region. Amongst the range of mechanisms, factors such as wildlife adaptation to changing landscapes and selection for antimicrobial resistance appear to be of major significance. However, exploring multi-scale complex relationships is a challenge to epidemiology."
The role and significance of wildlife–livestock interfaces in disease ecology has largely been neglected... See Global trends in infectious diseases at the wildlife–livestock interface, PNAS, 13.08.2015

And of course there is a petition to 'Save the Bellinger River Snapping Turtle from Possible Extinction'. It appears that many people from overseas seem to want to keep the unique turtle alive.

06.08.2015 A new parasite in the western long-necked turtle

16.07.2015 The Guardian, It is noteworthy that freshwater turtles subjected to the illegal wildlife trade, living in “terrible conditions", deprived of “food or water for about six months, destined for the pet and food markets in Hong Kong and China” also suffered from eye ulcers and other health problems.


16.07.2015 The Guardian, 10 Australian species at extreme risk of extinction: can they be saved? Unfortunately the Bellinger River snapping turtle has made it into the '10 Australian species list' that are about to be pushed off the planet. "Freshwater turtles are crucial to river ecosystems because they eat dead and decaying matter." The end of a "permanent grin" and clean water.

02.06.2015 Bellingen Courier Sun, Roads to Ruin... or 'Oil slick raises concerns'. Finally the spotlight is on water quality. The 'blind spot' in the inquiry might be overcome and behind the obscuration lurks a "potential contamination from road run-off into the river system...Dorrigo Quarry upgrade and the subsequent increased number of trucks driving up and down the mountain. There are claims that " the oil slick from the road’s surface is making its way into the waterway...The slick on the river appears on a regular basis and it’s coming from vehicles"

"The “results of the water testing indicated that the level of hydrocarbons and BTEX (volatile organic compounds found in petrol) in the water meet Australian fresh and marine water guidelines." Said Council’s general manager. NB Links are not in the original article. 

More on Pacific Highway 'upgrade'. Or straight to Bill Laurance, Roads to ruin.


Saving the Bellinger River turtles through IVF?


23.05.2015 abc/video  'Mystery illness' gives birth to the first wildlife biosecurity team in NSW. They set up quarantine facilities (in Sydney) to save the Bellinger River turtles from extinction. Should there not be biosecurity warning signs up and down the river?


23.05.2015 Guardian, "Turtle on edge of extinction after sudden attack by mystery disease
A species of turtle has been pushed to the brink of extinction over the course of just one month after a mystery disease swept through its habitat in New South Wales...“For this to occur over the period of a month is very alarming. It’s a mystery event never seen in Australia before. It may take years before we find out what’s happened here...“What we do know is that it kills and it kills rapidly. Within a month, the turtles have gone from not threatened to endangered or critically endangered. The problem is that they only exist in the Bellinger river and nowhere else in the world, so a population crash here means extinction.”....
The alarming decline, revealed on what is world turtle day, is the latest woe faced by a freshwater turtle species. According to the IUCN, 62% of the world’s freshwater turtle species are either threatened or endangered.
Freshwater turtles are considered crucial to the health of river ecosystems because they eat dead and decaying matter and help recycle nutrients."
23.05.2015 abc  'Scientists race against time /Scientists are scratching their heads.' Lawrence Orel, from the NSW Office of Environment and Heritage: "Unfortunate as it is for that species, we've not been able to detect any other impact on other species or turtles in the river, or other fauna in the river."

23.05.2015 abc AM "The incident has baffled scientists...

Zoologist Dr Ricky Spencer: Their whole range could be affected by now; we don't know that. We basically had to go in before winter and recover what we could. And if their whole range is affected, then there may be no other turtles out there.
We know that it wipes them out very, very quickly. Individuals get lesions - and particularly around their eye - but throughout their whole body there are these lesions that basically kill them and it has a 100 per cent mortality rate.

...It's not a population crash, it's an extinction event."

05.05.2015 Australian Geographic  The Bellinger River snapping turtle is on a bleak trajectory toward extinction. "ONCE (1788?) AN UNTOUCHED wilderness (?) of hills, valleys and waterfalls, the Bellinger River National Park is now (2015!) a graveyard for river turtles infected by a mysterious and deadly illness..."

28.04.2015 abc  A mystery virus has swept through more than 90 percent of known habitat in the Bellinger Catchment, killing every Bellinger River Snapping turtle it has infected. Since mid-February vets have been working on identifying the 'mystery virus'.  17 healthy turtles were removed from their habitat and put on a breeding in captivity program. An interplay between extinction and hope...

07.04.2015 Coffs Coast Advocate The Raising Awareness stage: A forest of signs has been installed by Bellingen Shire Council warning the Snapping Turtles of human impacts. "Diagnostic testing is still underway to try to identify the cause of this epidemic in the Bellinger River Snapping Turtles."

05.04.2015 Bellingen Shire Council Updates: Bellinger River Snapping Turtle Deaths

abc 29.03.2015  A sharp decline in turtle numbers in the Riverland of South Australia. Authorities estimate the freshwater turtle population has dropped by as much as 90 per cent over the past four decades.

26.03.2015 NSW gov. Bellinger River Snapping Turtles #4 (PDF)  “We have not yet found evidence of a highly pathogenic organism, but the investigation continues” Dr Karrie Rose, from the Australian Registry of Wildlife Health at the Taronga Conservation Society


The Conversation 25.03.2015, Ricky Spencer, Turtle extinction event bodes ill for our waterways
"Turtles are an evolutionary success story, having persisted for over 220 million years...

They are also long-lived and turtles can bio-accumulate toxins in their shells. Regular sampling (shell or nails) of marked individuals can be used to monitor long-term exposure to toxins and pollutants in the river – something that snapshot monitoring of water quality may miss.
The current disease threatening to drive the Bellinger River Snapping Turtle to extinction is a potential window into a long-term breakdown of ecosystem services. The possible extinction of a long-lived ancient species that has survived several million years might be a significant warning sign of the current state of our freshwater environments.

Yet the peril of this one turtle species is more than an isolated issue. It gives us a window into the health of the entire ecosystem around the Bellinger River, and suggests something is very wrong."

ABC 25.03.2015  Mystery! "We may never know what the cause of this outbreak has been...But certainly, we'll be taking steps to ensure the population is conserved as best we can." Geoff Ross, Incident Management Controller


Zilch outcome, zero news on the pathogen ecology (that is outside the turtles' bodies)  - An emerging infectious disease (EID) ?

Bellingen Courier 24.03.2015   "There is little more the Incident Management Team (IMT) can achieve.... More than 315 turtles, about 10 per cent of the population, have been found dead or dying as a result of contracting the disease and experts said “there is an intensive ongoing effort to determine the cause of the mortalities, involving at least seven specialist institutions. A number of serious pathogens have been excluded, and work is ongoing. Novel pathogens can be frustrating to elucidate and require significant time”."

- On the impacts of the road maintenance practices in the area. Boggy Creek (riparian area) and heavy machinery.

NSW government PDF factsheet/ map 03.2015 Bellinger river turtle deaths

ABC Coffs Coast 24.03.2015. "Officials from the Incident Management Team said the kill was unprecedented. Never before has a species been affected so dramatically in such a short time."

18.03.2015 abc When the habitat is degraded - artificial breeding is the answer. To repopulate the Bellinger River with snapping turtles again could take 100 years.
 
18.03.2015  Bellingen Courier Bellinger River Snapping Turtles (Myuchelys georgesi) mortality update:  An "unexplained mortality event" in the Bellinger River. "Surveys indicate that turtles along 42km of the Bellinger River between Bishops Creek at Darkwood and Lavenders Bridge in Bellingen are affected."

16.03.2015 abc Quarantine measures considered to ensure survival of Bellinger River turtles. Nearly 20 percent of the species may have now been lost to the unknown 'mystery' pathogen.

14.03.2015  Coffs coast advocate (Update) Bellinger turtles response team forms. "Only Bellinger River Snapping Turtles are affected, with almost 300 severely affected or dead turtles found to date with severe internal symptoms including major organ damage."

Bellingen Council,  Bellinger River Snapping Turtle Deaths, factsheets


10.03.2015 Bellingen Courier (Update)   Message: Stay clear of the waterways. "New England National Park’s upper catchment, including Brinerville, has been closed until further notice as wildlife officers discover more dead turtles higher up the Bellinger River...Though there’s nothing to explain why affected turtles are found suffering blindness, leading to inability to feed and subsequent starvation, the vacuum in scientific data been filled by locals’ theorising everything from long-term environmental degradation of the Bellingen River, the 2014 drought followed by the recent rains, to a claim that chemicals from an ice drug lab have polluted the waterway."

 
06.03.2015 env.gov.au  (Update) Bellinger River turtle mortality update: #2 Incident Controller and NPWS Senior Wildlife Management Officer reporting on the pathogen ecology of the area. Images

05.03.2015 Coffs coast Advocate (Update) "Assessment teams will begin monitoring the river upstream of Thora to map exactly as possible the extent of the area where turtles have been affected. Water quality sampling failed to identify contamination including pesticides, organochlorines, organophosphorous and pyrethroids. Results on turtles sent to Sydney for clinical and pathology analysis are expected later this week."

04.03.2015 Courier-Sun  Microorganisms are to blame. "EPA officers also carried out an inspection of road works being carried out by the Roads and Maritime Services (RMS) at Myers Bluff on Waterfall Way. No environmental issues were identified but the EPA requested that RMS carry out a thorough review of its activities to ensure there are no underlining environmental issues which may affect the river."

03.03.15  NPWS-led team investigating 100+ freshwater turtle deaths in Bellinger Rvr. No obvious cause. Possibly viral or fungal

27.02.15 abc  EPA rules out toxic spill as the cause of a large Bellinger River turtle kill. EPA officers took the samples from four key locations along the river including at Myers Bluff and Thora Bridge.

24.02.15  Flood warning for Bellinger River at Thora

12.09.14  Road safety work   Water Fall Way - examined a 40 kilometre stretch of road from Tyringham Street at Dorrigo to the junction of the Pacific Highway . “Work to strengthen and stabilise the slope at Myers Bluff and Gordonsville was also fast tracked to ensure that road safety benefits are in place by the end of 2014.”

 27.08.14  Minor flood warning for Thora




At a slightly different location of the river:

17.12.2014  A semi trailer with 27 tonnes of fertilizer rolled into the Bellingen River along North Bank Rd.
>Pollution in urban and farm runoff in Hawaii is causing tumors in endangered sea turtles. Duke news 2014. “Eutrophication and the dietary promotion of sea turtle tumors,” Kyle S. Van Houtan, Celia M. Smith, Meghan L. Dailer and Migiwa Kawachi, published September 30, 2014 in PeerJ. DOI: 10.7717/peerj.602 via 


Links:
Bellinger River emydura - vulnerable species listing, 1997:

"Threats to Emydura macquarii (Bellinger River form), include extraction of river sand and gravel, construction of bridge and ford crossings upstream of the species location, low intensity grazing and agricultural activities in downstream reaches of the Bellinger River, logging of native forests leading to water pollution and soil degradation, and line fishing as a possible minor threat."



Bellinger River Turtles- A Window to a National Crisis? Some local background on the the Bellinger River Emydura.

2014 Bellingen Shire Council, Implementing the Dairy Effluent Assessment and Planning Project of the Bellinger River

Waterfall Way - Lining the Pacific Highway with Crumbled Mountain  


UPDATE/Readings:

Agricultural insecticides pose a global risk to surface water bodies, PNAS
The first global map (Australia) to be produced on potential insecticide contamination, The Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ, 25.02.2015

Alessio Ippolito, Mira Kattwinkel, Jes J. Rasmussen, Ralf B. Schäfer, Riccardo Fornaroli, Matthias Liess (2015):
Modeling global distribution of agricultural insecticides in surface waters. First global map on insecticide runoff through modelling. Environmental Pollution, Volume 198, March 2015, Pages 54-60, ISSN 0269-7491,
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2014.12.016 

1/3 of freshwater shrimp at extinction risk due to invasive species, climate change and agricultural and urban pollution. Dead shrimp blues: Assessing the extinction risk in freshwater shrimps, scimex  26.03.2015

Dead Shrimp Blues - the imperilled status of freshwater shrimps, IUCN, PLOS 25.03.2015

An attack on two fronts: predicting how changes in land use and climate affect the distribution of stream macroinvertebrates Freshwater Biology, 04. 2015

Conservation Biology of Freshwater Turtles and Tortoises, IUCN

Pharmaceutical residues increasingly disrupt aquatic life: A hidden global change Science daily 02.02.2016 Ever larger amounts of pharmaceutical residues, such as female hormones from the contraceptive pill, have been finding their way into the water -- through urination by humans and livestock. ..



Images
1. Turtle, Yarrawarra Aboriginal Cultural Centre at Corindi Beach.
2./3. Turtles, Bellingen tiles
4. Bellingen mural, Cow in river
5. Dragonflies and happy invertebrates on fresh water eu