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Lake Awoonga

Coordinates: 24°04′31″S 151°18′29″E / 24.0753°S 151.308°E / -24.0753; 151.308
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Lake Awoonga
Lake Awoonga is located in Queensland
Lake Awoonga
Lake Awoonga
LocationVia Benaraby, Central Queensland
Coordinates24°04′31″S 151°18′29″E / 24.0753°S 151.308°E / -24.0753; 151.308
Typereservoir
Primary inflowsBoyne River
Primary outflowsBoyne River
Basin countriesAustralia
Surface area6,750 ha (16,700 acres)
Water volume777,000 ML (630,000 acre⋅ft)
Surface elevation40 m (130 ft) AHD

Lake Awoonga was formed on the Boyne River by the dam located 30 km (19 mi) from Gladstone, in Central Queensland, Australia. It is approximately 30 minutes drive from Gladstone, via Benaraby.

Lake Awoonga is the main water supply for the Gladstone region.[1] Its recreation areas and recreational fishery are provided free to locals and tourists by the Gladstone Area Water Board.[2]

Specifications

Built across the Boyne River south west of Gladstone, the Awoonga Dam is a rockfill structure with a concrete upstream face slab. The embankment was formed from rock excavated from a quarry on the side of the dam wall. The embankment is over 650 metres (2,130 feet) in length and 54.4 metres (178 feet) in height, with a volume of approximately 2,000,000 cubic metres (71,000,000 cubic feet) of rock. The spillway’s height is 40 metres (130 feet) AHD (Australian Height Datum). This design of the current dam allows for further raising, if necessary, through the addition of gates to the top of the spillway. The maximum capacity of the present dam is 777,000 megalitres (2.05×1011 US gallons). The dam was built by Thiess Brothers and was completed in March 1985.[3]

When full the lake is 40 m (111 feet) above sea level.[1] Approximately 200,000 fish are released each year including barramundi and some mangrove jack. By early 2006 a total of over 2.9 million fish had been released into Lake Awoonga including 2.4 million barramundii, 470,000 sea mullet and 15,000 mangrove jack. These fish were bred at Gladstone Area Water Board's Fish Hatchery facility. The largest barramundi caught, as at November 2008, weighed in at a 36.5 kg (80.5 lbs).[4] Lake Awoonga is one of the only dams in Australia to have been stocked with mangrove jack.[5]

Fauna

Squatter pigeon

Lake Awoonga is home to an array of small animals, several of which are of conservation significance including the grey-headed flying fox and the yellow-bellied glider.[6] Aquatic vegetation maintains an array of small animals that support the fish, eels, turtles, platypus and birds. Other species of birds, reptiles, and native fauna including bandicoots, rufous bettongs, kangaroos, wallabies, greater gliders, and brushtail possums can be found around the lake.[7]

The lake hosts more than 225 species of birds. Species include the southern squatter pigeon which is listed as vulnerable[8] and a further twenty-seven bird species listed on International Migratory Conservation Agreement Lists.[7][9]

The Gladstone Area Water Board has a fish breeding program in place and breeds barramundi and mangrove jack for stocking into Lake Awoonga as well as some of the surrounding waterways. Approximately 200,000 fish are released into Lake Awoonga each year (200,000 barramundi and small numbers of mangrove jack). The fish are bred at a purpose-built fish hatchery, operated jointly by the Gladstone Area Water Board and the Gladstone Ports Corporation.

The hatchery is one of the largest breeders of barramundi fingerlings in Queensland and their mangrove jack breeding program has resulted in Lake Awoonga holding the largest stocks in Australia with more than 50,000 released.[5] Other fish species include Agassiz's glass perch, banded grunter, barramundi, bony bream, eastern rainbowfish, eeltail catfish, fly-specked hardyhead, forktail catfish, gudgeon, long-finned eel, longtom, mouth almighty, sea mullet, snub-nose garfish and spangled perch. Also present in low numbers are Hyrtl’s tandan, mangrove jack, saratoga, silver perch, sleepy cod, sooty grunter, and yellowbelly. Since 1996, over 2.5 million barramundi fingerlings and 470,000 mullet fingerlings have been released into the lake. Barramundi in the 10–25 kg range are regularly caught from the lake.

Flora

More than 415 plant varieties play a vital role in the health of the Lake Awoonga region. Ranging from vine thickets and rainforests to tall woodlands and grassy woodlands, they include over 45 confirmed species of aquatic plants such as ribbon weed, hornwort and sedges found in the shallow water areas. Aquatic plants have an important function in that they provide food and cover for animals, stabilise the river bottom against erosion and recycle nutrients.

Several plants of conservation significance exist in the region Awoonga including Persoonia Amaliae and Eucalyptus melanoleuca which are listed as rare, while Cycas Megacarpa and Grevillea venusta are noted as vulnerable. Banksia integrifolia and Xanthorrhoea latifolia are common protected species that can also be found in the area.

There are a number of declared alien plants and environmental weeds proliferating throughout the river system and the catchment including parthenium, salvinia, cat’s claw vine, lantana, oleander and rubbervine. A pest management plan has been developed to supplement the annual weed control programme.

Recreation sheds at Lake Awoonga

The Gladstone Area Water Board has carried out vegetation re-establishment programs in order to replace remnant endangered regional ecosystems impacted by the lake.

Recreation facilities

Swimming is permitted from the shore and there is a 24-hour boat ramp that provides access for sailing, fishing, and skiing etc. Various watercraft, including house boats can be hired and organised. Fishing cruises are also available.[2] The waters of Lake Awoonga are controlled by Queensland Boating and Fisheries Patrol and Queensland Water Police and all users of the lake are required to adhere to the posted speed limits.

The lake is a popular fishing spot, especially for barramundi. The barramundi closed season does not apply to Lake Awoonga, although some limits do apply.[4] Camping is permitted at two places on Lake Awoonga, the Caravan Park and the Boynedale Bush Camp. The main recreation area is provided free to the public and includes picnic shelters, barbecues, walking paths.

The Boynedale Bush camp is a basic camping facility around the southern side of Lake Awoonga, ten minutes from the townships of Many Peaks and Ubobo. Access is via a dirt road from the Gladstone to Monto Road which may become boggy in wet weather. There is no potable water at this site.

Glengarry Homestead

The area inundated by the dam includes much of the Glengarry pastoral station, making it unviable as a pastoral property and so it was purchased by the Gladstone Area Water Board on 1 August 1979. It is expected when the dam is at its highest levels of inundation, the heritage-listed Glengarry Homestead will be on an island within the dam.[10]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Gladstone Area Water Board: Frequently Asked Questions Archived 2009-05-19 at the Library of Congress Web Archives
  2. ^ a b Attractions in the Gladstone Region Archived 2010-07-23 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Pullar, Ian; Cook, Margaret (2001). Watery Sauces: A People's History of the Water Resources Commission (Queensland) and Its Predecessors, 1881-1995 (PDF). Department of Natural Resources and Mines. p. 224. ISBN 978-0734517876.
  4. ^ a b Gladstone Area Water Board: Recreation Archived 2008-07-18 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ a b Gladstone Area Water Board: Hatchery Archived 2009-05-19 at the Library of Congress Web Archives
  6. ^ Department of the Environment, Water, Heritage and the Arts' List of Threatened Fauna
  7. ^ a b Gladstone Area Water Board: Recreation & Hatchery - Flora and Fauna Archived 2007-08-29 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ Dept of the Environment, Water, Heritage and the Arts' List of Threatened Fauna
  9. ^ Migratory species in Australia Department of the Environment, Water, Heritage and the Arts.
  10. ^ "Glengarry Homestead (entry 600386)". Queensland Heritage Register. Queensland Heritage Council. Retrieved 1 August 2014.