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Words: acronyms and organizations
Internal
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Resource Condition Monitoring - Land Salinity
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This project (also known as the GAPS project) aims to fill the
present
highest priority gaps in the groundwater monitoring program and
develop
a targeted surface water monitoring program. This project will
build on
the existing infrastructure and standardised monitoring protocols
for
ground and surface water data collection. The project is the Land Salinity portion of
a much larger project to enhance the Resource Condition
Monitoring in all Australian states. This project is funded by
National Heritage Trust and the National Action Plan.
In the period 2005-2008 the NRM Regions in Western Australia
will be allocating
approximately $400 million of regional community, State and
Federal Government
investments under the Natural Heritage Trust and National Action
Plan to ensure natural
resources are protected and used sustainably. To do this
effectively, the NRM Regions need
to be able to understand what condition their natural resources
are in, if they are improving,
maintaining or degrading. They need to be able to respond to
problem areas by implementing
appropriate on-ground actions and assessing whether their efforts
have been effective.
Resource condition monitoring is crucial for enabling continuous
improvement through an
adaptive approach to the management of natural resources.
Appropriate resource condition
monitoring systems must therefore be designed to identify and
track threats, understand the
status and trends in natural resource condition, and assess
progress made by the NRM
Regions. |

WA NRM Zones (Click on the map for
a larger image)
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Rationale
The highest priority is to enhance resource condition
monitoring capability by utilising and building on existing
monitoring infrastructure, and by providing resources for
regional technical support, through common database management
systems. The analyses for the National Land and Water Resources
Audit (2000), and the Salinity Investment Framework - Phase I
(2003), both identified a number of landscapes in Western
Australia where there is no data, or insufficient data to
determine trends in groundwater levels and salinity hazard
(particularly the Northern Agricultural NRM Region).
Resource condition monitoring is critical for
determining trends in status or condition. There are significant
soil/landscape zones in Western Australia with no groundwater
bore monitoring.
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Effective NRM requires appropriate action at all
levels
(Click for larger image)
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BackgroundIn 1998, ‘Land Monitor’ completed the first
systematic evaluation of the extent of saline land in the
agricultural area of Western Australia. The project determined
the extent and trend in land salinity for the decadal period
ending 1998 and it is proposed that
this benchmark be used to assess this indicator. A repeat of this
project is conservatively estimated to require $1.5 million over
3 years.
Over 1,000 bores are currently monitored by the Department of
Agriculture for the ‘Saltwatch’ database. This database contains records of drilling and time series
data on water level and electrical conductivity. Spread from
Geraldton to Esperance, Saltwatch bores are monitored quarterly
and provide direct evidence of the effect of climate and land
use. (See map on right)
An additional 2,000 bores record the impact of specific
treatments on the distribution of salinity and its risk. A
further 2,000 bores collated from non-agency programs completes
the data record. However, the existing database is not
sufficiently well distributed to record regional trends in many
significant landscapes, particularly in the Perth basin or the
eastern wheatbelt. In some areas, it has an insufficient
distribution to effectively monitor the impact of management
actions on resource condition.
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Saltwatch Bores
(click for larger image)
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Land Salinity MonitoringState-wide objectives are to
develop a long-term strategic approach to resource condition
monitoring under a framework that coordinates and integrates
salinity monitoring in NRM Regions across the states. Monitoring will take
place at two scales:
- Landscape scale - track the extent and trends in salinity
risk/hazard to establish a dataset for measuring resource
condition.
Water table trend + land area extent = salinity
risk/hazard
- Catchment scale - groundwater level monitoring alone is
unable to directly evaluate and link the outcomes from specific
on-ground management actions designed to meet desired
water-balance targets at a catchment scale. Low-cost rainfall
and runoff gauging in key wheatbelt catchments in each NRM
Region, will monitor the rainfall and surface water components
of the water balance to link management actions to catchment
water level changes and modify regional trends.
The time series monitoring data will be archived on the
Department of
Agriculture and Foods Research database and interpretations made
available to stakeholders at local, State and National scales.
| Monitoring water level and flow
| Outcomes
- Extent and trends in land and water salinity assessed and
reported
- Relevant and quality data collected for analysing the
impact of management actions on resource condition
- Demonstrate the impacts of management actions on the local
and regional water levels and the rate and extent of land
salinisation.
- Salinity management targeted to land and related assets, at
highest risk
- Investment analysis and works informed by high quality data
and interpretations
- Groundwater resources being managed to maintain or improve
water quality
| | | Project Manager: Richard Wheater
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