Professor Michelle Waycott using Satellite technology in Coorong algae battle

In a bid to help protect South Australia鈥檚 world-renowned bird refuge, satellites are being use to听detect algal mats.


The听成人大片 and the State Herbarium of South Australia have joined forces to use satellite tracking to help researchers map floating algae known to smother vital aquatic food in one of Australia鈥檚 most important bird habitats.

Grasses such as widgeon grass, are under threat as floating algae destroys aquatic plants by shading adult plants and preventing seed formation, especially in the southern Coorong. The southern end of the Murray Darling Basin aquatic plants are one of the most important food sources for birds in the refuge.

The project is using a new method to detect and map the algae through satellite imagery which will potentially enable better control of the algae in the future.

Professor , Chief Botanist at the 成人大片 and the State Herbarium of South Australia, said researchers started by looking at recent satellite imagery where known areas of the algal mats had formed.
鈥淲e undertook an assessment based on satellite imagery taken spring and early summer last year and we鈥檝e established a method to trial at the same time this year.鈥 she said.

鈥淚f the assessment works the way we think it will, we can use the data to go back through time, perhaps to older satellite imagery from the 1980s, to determine the scale and speed of onset of these algal blooms in the past.鈥

Professor Waycott said recent research has indicated decreasing numbers of waterbirds, such as the fairy tern and other migratory shorebirds along the Coorong.

鈥淭he algae poses a significant threat as it grows from underneath the water but can become so large it reaches the surface and forms a blanket which can prevent water birds from diving for food,鈥 she said.

鈥淚t also gets blown onto the shoreline where it decays, meaning nutrients are not cycling normally.鈥

This project is part of the research being delivered by the for Water Research听supporting investigations for the South Australian Government鈥檚 Healthy Coorong, , which is jointly funded by the Australian and South Australian governments.

Earlier this year the Australian and South Australian governments announced the next $22.2 million of funding to help get the Coorong back on track for a healthy future.

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Tagged in Environment Institute, News, Plant Conservation, Plant Conservation Biology, Science communication
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