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Upper Macleay River Source: Southern Cross University |
In a few short years Australia’s east coast has experienced drought, blazing bushfires and unprecedented floods, driving discussion about the impacts of climate change. What is less discussed, and also less well understood, are the implications of such extremes for the quality of water in our rivers.
Researchers from Southern Cross University led a unique study published in Water Research with collaboration from dedicated team of citizen scientists to help monitor how these climate extremes impact river water quality.
Professor Scott Johnston, a Landscape Hydrogeochemist from the University’s Faculty of Science and Engineering has overseen this water quality monitoring project in the Macleay River since 2016. The Macleay is a large coastal catchment in Northern New South Wales that stretches across the Great Dividing Range from the tablelands near Armidale to the coast at Kempsey and South West Rocks.
“We collaborated with a trained group of local citizen scientist volunteers who were able to regularly collect river water samples, capturing what took place at a level of detail that is really quite unique,” he said. ‘’Without their hard work on the ground, this study would not have happened and it is a great example of a university and community working closely together to help understand a locally relevant issue.’