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Australian water quality guidelines: a new approach for protecting
ecosystem health*
Barry T. Hart1,
Ian C. Campbell1,
Connie Angehrn-Bettinazzi1
& Michael J. Jones2
1Water
Studies Centre, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia;
2NSR
Environmental Consultants, Melbourne, Australia
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Abstract
The Australian and New Zealand Environment and Conservation
Council (ANZECC) and the Australian Water Resources Council (AWRC)
have developed a National Water Quality Management Strategy which
seeks to ensure that the nation's water resources are managed on
a sustainable basis. An important element of this strategy are the
Australian Water Quality Guidelines which focus on the protection
of Australian freshwater and marine ecosystems. Here the aim is
to protect biodiversity and maintain the ecological integrity of
each marine and freshwater resource. Specific guidelines have been
formulated in terms of key indicators of quality, with a single
reference value or ranges of reference values provided for guidance.
For those indicators where ranges are provided, it is the expectation
that State environmental and resource management agencies will undertake
local, site-specific investigations of their own systems to define
the specific levels to be adopted. For the first time, specific
and quantitative biological indicators have been introduced; these
are species richness, species composition, primary production, and
ecosystem function.
As Australia progresses towards broader, more holistic,
ecologically-based management of the nation's water resources, the
present water quality guidelines must be extended to ecosystem or
environmental guidelines, where the maintenance of adequate water
quality is seen as only one (albeit important) component. Other
considerations must include habitat protection, sediment quality,
and stream flow maintenance, This increased emphasis on more ecologically-focused
management of Australia's inland and coastal waters will present
a number of challenges for the three major groups involved: the
community, the managers, and the researchers. These challenges are
discussed.
Keywords: water quality guidelines, water quality management,
ecosystem health, biological indicators
* Based on a paper presented at a Workshop on Biological Assessment
of Aquatic Ecosystem Health, Sydney, 1-2 October 1992.
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