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Inglis River

River in Tasmania, Australia

Inglis River

Summary

River in Tasmania, Australia

FieldValue
nameInglis
imageWharf-Wynyard-20070423-012.jpg
image_captionWharf at the mouth of the Inglis River in Wynyard
pushpin_mapAustralia Tasmania
pushpin_map_captionLocation of the river mouth in Tasmania
subdivision_type1Country
subdivision_name1Australia
subdivision_type2State
subdivision_name2Tasmania
length61 km
source1Campbell Ranges
source1_locationTaken
source1_elevation507 m
mouthBass Strait
mouth_locationWynyard
mouth_coordinates
mouth_elevation0 m
basin_size471 km2
tributaries_leftRattler River, Jessie River, Flowerdale River
tributaries_rightCalder River, Big Creek, Blackfish Creek
extra

The Inglis River is a river in North West Tasmania, Australia, it extends approximately 61 km from the Campbell Ranges near Takone before discharging into Bass Strait at Wynyard. The Flowerdale River is the largest tributary system on the Inglis River and makes up approximately one-third of the 471 km2 Inglis-Flowerdale catchment basin.

Inglis-Flowerdale catchment area

Inglis River estuary looking upstream.
Stream pool of Camp Creek, a tributary of the Inglis River.

While not tributaries of the main river system, Sisters Creek and Seabrook Creek are notable minor creeks which form part of the 616 km2 Inglis-Flowerdale catchment area. Annual rainfall ranges from about 1000 mm at the coast to greater than 1600 mm in the upper reaches of the catchment, some 26 km inland from Wynyard.

Forestry plantations dominate the landscape in the western region of the catchment, with intensive agriculture land-use in the north and eastern regions. Because of the steep and confining nature of the topography around the Inglis and Flowerdale rivers, both have retained substantial native forests that tend to buffer the rivers from both land-use activities.

Environment and wildlife

A 2003 water assessment report determined that the upper Inglis and Flowerdale Rivers and their tributaries are in generally good ecological health, however the middle and lower reaches of the Inglis River have less healthy macroinvertebrate communities. The poorer health of these communities suggest that they have been impacted by sedimentation from upstream forestry operations, gravel pits and poor stream-side agricultural land management practices. Measures to help mitigate further environment issues may include fencing off rivers to prevent livestock from accessing waterways and re-vegetation of river banks to prevent further erosion.

Beddomeia capensis is an endangered freshwater snail that had previously been surveyed at a tributary of Big Creek in 1989, but is now only known to occur on a few small streams upon Table Cape. Other aquatic threatened species in the Inglis-Flowerdale catchment includes the endangered giant freshwater crayfish, and the Australian grayling.

Willow removal

During 1999 and 2000, large scale willow infestation removal works were undertaken along the lower reaches of the Inglis River in the Flowerdale valley under the guidance of a federal government funding initiative.{{cite report |author=Green, Graham |date=2001 |title=North-west rivers environmental review – A review of Tasmanian environmental quality data to 2001

References

References

  1. "Map of Inglis River, TAS". Bonzle Digital Atlas of Australia.
  2. (December 2003). "Aquatic Ecology of Rivers in the Inglis-Flowerdale Catchment". [[Department of Primary Industries, Water and Environment]].
  3. Water Assessment Branch. (2009). "Annual Waterways Report – Inglis-Flowerdale Catchment". Department of Primary Industries and Water (Tasmania).
  4. . (2011). ["Beddomeia capensis, Hydrobiid Snail (Table Cape)"](http://dpipwe.tas.gov.au/Documents/Beddomeia-capensis-Listing-Statement.pdf). *Department of Primary Industries, Parks, Water and Environment, Tasmania*.
  5. (26 June 2014). "Willow removal leads to mass soil erosion in north-west Tasmania". [[ABC News (Australia).
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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