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Effective water management is critical to controlling pollution and improving water quality.
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The quality of water in streams, wetlands, groundwater systems, oceans and our drinking water is linked to land-based activities.
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20 years of monitoring data for the region shows water quality is stable and improving slightly, though there is significant variability from year to year, in line with climatic conditions.
Water quality monitoring is reported annually in the region's Report Card, which is managed by Healthy Land & Water. Some of the reasons for the change over time includes:
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The following actions will play a critical role in meeting the water targets.
These actions have been identified by the South East Queensland community. These actions are updated regularly in the region's Natural Resource Management Plan, which is managed by Healthy Land & Water on behalf of the region's community.
Plan |
Implement Water Sensitive Urban Design (WSUD) to limit pollution from residential areas. |
Ensure sufficient cultural flows, which encompass environmental flows, to maintain downstream ecological processes. |
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Identify barriers to fish passage and develop and implement solutions in priority areas. |
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Support and create processes for the community and various levels of government to work together to develop new and enhance current regional and local land use planning mechanisms to achieve SEQ NRM Plan targets. |
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Manage |
Maintain levels of vegetation and groundcover in priority areas such as hillslopes to reduce sediment pollution. |
Provide a management program to limit sediment pollution from construction sites. |
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Manage wastewater treatment plants to maintain or improve water quality. |
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Provide a management program for septic systems in rural residential and peri urban areas. |
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Reduce litter impacts on waterways, manage rural diffuse sediment and nutrient pollution from poor agricultural practices |
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Improve riparian zone management by addressing clearing, weeds and cattle access in priority areas. |
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Develop citizen science activities to genuinely engage the community in stewardship of their local waterways and environs. |
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Expand water quality monitoring spatial coverage, detail and analysis. |
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Consider urban design and infrastructure, including roads, bridges, rail and other large-scale development to come up with strategies to manage potential adverse effects on floodplain management, wildlife harm and habitat fragmentation. |
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Deploy community capacity building and develop monitoring metrics on erosion and sediment control and role of industry accountability. |
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Restore |
Restore priority riparian zones and instream habitats to improve water quality. |
Stabilise actively eroding gullies, channels and creek banks that are generating sediment. |
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Empower |
Integrate floodplain management planning. |
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Water resources and riparian areas provide ecosystem services and clean water for human consumption, environmental flows, and recreational, agricultural and industrial uses. Water based ecosystems provide habitat for many important plants and animals. Wetlands in particular, filter impurities such as excess nutrients and sediments. Effective water management is critical to controlling pollution and improving quality.
In 2031, scheduled water quality objectives for all SEQ waterways will be achieved or exceeded.
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Scroll down to see the huge number of projects we are partnering on to protect South East Queensland's beautiful and biodiverse environs.
Click to see by South East Queensland Natural Resource Management Plan categories