Lake Nunijup Explained

Lake Nunijup
Coords:-34.4067°N 117.4092°W
Pushpin Map:Australia Western Australia
Pushpin Label Position:top
Pushpin Map Caption:Location in Western Australia
Location:Western Australia
Type:saline
Basin Countries:Australia
Depth: (during overflow)
Islands:none
Embedded:
Stroke-Colour:
  1. C60C30
Stroke-Width:3
Marker:water
Marker-Colour:
  1. 1F2F57
Zoom:13

Lake Nunijup is an ephemeral salt lake located in the Great Southern region of Western Australia, approximately south west of Cranbrook and north west of Mount Barker.[1]

Description

The lake is part of the Bow River sub-catchment and the Kent River catchment. The surrounding landscape is composed of lakes and swamps with lunettes situated over tertiary alluvium, colluvium and sand with underlying laterite also present. Quaternary swamp and lake deposits are also found within the Frankland district. Small amounts of brackish water can be received from the south western flanks of the Stirling Range that can flow into the lake. The area receives around of rainfall per annum and loses around from evaporation.[1] The annual inflow to the lake between 1973 and 2001 was, of which about 70% evaporated and 26% seeped through the sandy-gravelly lake bed. The lake has a capacity of and an overflow depth of up to, and is on an unallocated crown land reserve. The lake and wetlands is situated in a wetland vegetation buffer zone that is unfenced and ranges from in width.[2]

History

The traditional owners of the area are the Noongar peoples, who have inhabited the region for tens of thousands of years.[3] The name Nunijup means place of the snakes.[2]

Land around the lake was first permanently settled by J.B.Parsons, who arrived in 1882 and selected an area of over, including part of the lake's shore. Parsons cleared much of the land all the way to the shoreline, and farmed sheep; he was still on the property in 1929.[4]

In 1940 it was proposed that water from the lake could be used as part of the region's water supply and could be pumped to Lake Matilda near Kendenup where a pumping station already existed. The levels of Lake Matilda were low at the time.[5]

The lake was once freshwater but became saline during the 1960s as a result of deforestation within the catchment area and lower rainfall.[6]

The lake is mostly permanent and once overflowed in 1982. The median salinity over the past two decades has been 8000 mg/L.[6]

The lake is used for swimming, and has a parking area and barbeque facilities available.[7]

Flora

The natural vegetation within the catchment area is jarrah forest (Eucalyptus marginata) and mixed jarrah, wandoo, and swamp yate open woodlands with wide swampy drainage lines that have paperbark (species of Melaleuca) and banksia woodlands and sedge swamps, while sandy flats surrounding them have a low-density mix of jarrah, marri (Eucalyptus calophylla), wandoo (Eucalyptus wandoo) and swamp yate (Eucalyptus occidentalis). Most of the catchment has been cleared for agricultural development.[6] Around the lake the overstorey is dominated by Eucalyptus wandoo while the mid-storey contains Melaleuca cuticularis with a sparse understorey of Baumea juncea. A seagrass, Ruppia megacarpa, and species of stoneworts of the genus Nitella are also common in the wetlands.[2]

Fauna

Some species of bird that have been observed at the lake include Australian shelduck, blue-billed duck, hoary-headed grebe, great crested grebe, musk duck, little black cormorant, great egret and silver gull.[8]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Living Lakes Project Stage 1: Part 1 Report Feasibility Study in the Wheatbelt and adjoining regions. JDA Consultant Hydrologists. Department of Regional Development and Lands. 22 December 2011. 29 December 2018. 7 April 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190407035127/http://www.drd.wa.gov.au/Publications/Documents/Living_Lakes_Stage_1_Part_1.pdf. dead.
  2. Web site: Lake Nunijup. South Coast Wetland Monitoring Project. June 2008. 29 December 2018. South Coast rivercare.
  3. Web site: The Wagyl Kaip and Southern Noongar Region. 30 December 2018. Aboriginal Corporation.
  4. News: Through the Cranbook-Frankland district.. . XXVIII . 2,922 . Western Australia . 16 November 1929 . 1 January 2019 . 5 . Trove.
  5. News: G.S. water supply . . 11 . 1396 . Western Australia . 2 December 1940 . 1 January 2019 . 4 . Trove.
  6. Web site: Hydrology of Lakes Nunijup, Poorrarecup and Carabundup. Salinity and Land Use Impacts Series. M.A.Bari. J.De Silva. Department of Water.
  7. Web site: Frankland River. 30 December 2018. Hidden Treasures of the Great Southern. 2014.
  8. Web site: Western Australian Bird Notes. 2 January 2019. Quarterly Newsletter. September 2000. Birds Australia Western Australia Inc..