Gwydir wetlands freshwater turtles dying while environmental water sits in Copeton

ONE of the last strongholds for the broad-shelled turtle in the Gwydir Wetlands west of Moree is on the brink of disappearing as the Gingham Waterhole rapidly dries, prompting urgent calls for environmental water releases from Copeton Dam.

Field surveys conducted last month by freshwater turtle researchers revealed a worsening ecological crisis at the site.

Professor Deborah Bower said if the waterhole dries completely, the broad-shelled turtle population there will almost certainly be lost.

“We are watching the collapse of a turtle population in real time,” Professor Deborah Bower said.

“The Gingham Waterhole has supported multiple turtle species for decades.

“Importantly, Copeton Dam currently holds over 800 GL, including approximately 217 GL of environmental water available for delivery before July, 2026, presenting a clear and immediate opportunity to intervene.”

The Gingham watercourse supports four internationally important Ramsar-listed sites in the Gwydir wetlands region near Moree. Wildlife in the area relies on rain and floods, as well as environmental flows managed by state and federal governments in support of the Murray-Darling basin plan.

Flows to the area were meant to continue until mid-to-late April but were abruptly stopped by WaterNSW in early March, which Guardian Australia understands followed a landowner complaint about overflow on their property. The water flow had commenced in early summer.

Researchers also confirmed the Murray River turtle population previously recorded at the site has nearly disappeared.

The team’s field inspection revealed clear signs that the ecosystem is already under severe stress. Researchers confirmed that the eastern long-necked turtle population is stressed, during the latest survey they discovered a freshly dead eastern long-necked turtle and another individual alive but severely diseased, suffering from shell and mouth infections consistent with deteriorating water quality and algal blooms.

A broad-shelled turtle at the Gingham Waterhole (Image: UNE).
A broad-shelled turtle at the Gingham Waterhole (Image: UNE).

“These are classic symptoms of wetlands collapsing under extreme drying,” Professor Bower said.

“If the waterhole continues to shrink, turtles will become trapped in increasingly poor-quality water before eventually dying from disease, predation from pigs, or desiccation.”

The Gwydir Wetlands are one of Australia’s most important inland wetland systems and historically relied on periodic flooding from the Gwydir River to maintain refuge habitats for wildlife. Today those flows are regulated by Copeton Dam upstream.

Professor Bower said the crisis unfolding at Gingham Waterhole raises a critical question about how environmental water is used.

“A relatively small environmental flow could maintain refuge habitat and prevent the loss of this population,” she said.

“This is exactly the type of ecological emergency environmental water was designed to respond to.”

Freshwater turtles are among Australia’s most threatened vertebrates, populations are particularly vulnerable because turtles can take more than eight years to mature, making population recovery very slow.

When key refuge wetlands dry completely, entire local populations can disappear.

“If this waterhole dries, we will likely witness the extirpation of a population that has persisted here for generations,” Professor Bower said.

“Once these populations are gone, they rarely return.”

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