Habitat Mapping Puts Rejuvenated Bethungra Dam On Map For Anglers
Bethungra Dam cements its place on the habitat map for the fishing community.
Bethungra Dam is well on its way to becoming a prized destination for the fishing community from far and wide due to OzFish Unlimited’s habitat mapping project.
The project, set up by an OzFish-Landcare NSW partnership, in collaboration with Junee Shire Council, with funding support from the NSW Recreational Fishing Trusts, the Australian Government through the Cooperative Research Centres program and BCF - Boating, Camping, Fishing.
Concerned there was a lack of habitat in the dam, Junee Shire Council contacted OzFish to see how the waterway could be rejuvenated.
Volunteers from OzFish Wagga Wagga Chapter and NSW Landcare jumped into kayaks to help undertake extensive in-stream habitat mapping late last year (2022) and the data they collected showed that there was little in the dam that would help fish to survive and thrive.
OzFish’s senior program manager for the Murray-Darling Basin, Braeden Lampard said they targeted a section of the dam which already had road access and nearby camping facilities to install new habitats.
“The restoration sites were chosen based on recreational fishing opportunities, site access and navigation,” he said.
“This is the first project of its kind for Bethungra Dam and Junee Shire Council, and we are already having discussions about what to do next.”
They divided the dam into a grid and graded each section containing habitat based on how much value it was providing for the fish population.
OzFish and Junee Shire Council literally sourced their woody debris from the scrapheap.
The council also stored debris from construction works that proved perfect for this project.
The installed structures will provide critical breeding sites, shelter and protection from predators, a place to rest, ambush sites and feeding grounds for aquatic species that have been previously stocked by NSW DPI Fisheries.
As part of the process, further restocking of fish numbers will take place as a way of boosting the population in the dam.
The scourge of redfin is a problem at Bethungra Dam.
It is suspected that the previously stocked fingerlings in the dam have been predated upon by the redfin perch population.
The installed habitat will provide critical refuge areas for native fish in the dam.
Junee Shire Council environmental officer, Mason Schembri hoped to see local anglers as well as tourists from near and far trying their luck at the dam.
“Council is really looking forward to seeing more people fishing out here. It gets widely used by a lot of people,” he said.
“Really just to get people outdoors and using the area.
“It’s a fantastic place.”
Head to https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WKIepM5gfAs to view a video of the restoration works at Bethungra Dam.
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