Proposed methods report for the Fitzroy catchment CSIRO logo A report from the CSIRO Northern Australia Water Resource Assessment to the Government of Australia CSIRO LAND AND WATER Cover image background ISBN: 978-1-4863-0713-5 Our research direction Provide the science to underpin Australia’s economic, social and environmental prosperity through stewardship of land and water resources ecosystems, and urban areas. Land and Water is delivering the knowledge and innovation needed to underpin the sustainable management of our land, water, and ecosystem biodiversity assets. Through an integrated systems research approach we provide the information and technologies required by government, industry and the Australian and international communities to protect, restore, and manage natural and built environments. Land and Water is a national and international partnership led by CSIRO and involving leading research providers from the national and global innovation systems. Our expertise addresses Australia’s national challenges and is increasingly supporting developed and developing nations response to complex economic, social, and environmental issues related to water, land, cities, and ecosystems. Citation CSIRO (2016) Proposed methods report for the Fitzroy catchment. A report from the CSIRO Northern Australia Water Resource Assessment to the Government of Australia. CSIRO, Australia. Copyright © Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation 2016. To the extent permitted by law, all rights are reserved and no part of this publication covered by copyright may be reproduced or copied in any form or by any means except with the written permission of CSIRO. Important disclaimer CSIRO advises that the information contained in this publication comprises general statements based on scientific research. The reader is advised and needs to be aware that such information may be incomplete or unable to be used in any specific situation. No reliance or actions must therefore be made on that information without seeking prior expert professional, scientific and technical advice. To the extent permitted by law, CSIRO (including its employees and consultants) excludes all liability to any person for any consequences, including but not limited to all losses, damages, costs, expenses and any other compensation, arising directly or indirectly from using this publication (in part or in whole) and any information or material contained in it. CSIRO is committed to providing web accessible content wherever possible. If you are having difficulties with accessing this document please contact csiroenquiries@csiro.au. CSIRO Northern Australia Water Resource Assessment acknowledgements This report was prepared for the Department of Agriculture and Water Resources. The Northern Australia Water Resource Assessment is part of the Australian Government’s Agricultural Competitiveness White Paper, the government’s plan for stronger farmers and a stronger economy. Important aspects of the Fitzroy Water Resource Assessment will be undertaken by the Western Australian Government. This report was reviewed by Dr Don McFarlane (CSIRO) and Dr Michael Robertson (CSIRO). The Northern Australia Water Resource Assessment would like to acknowledge the useful comments received from Ms Jacqueline Durrant (Western Australian Government) and Dr Glenn Harrington (Innovative Groundwater Solutions). Photo Forage sorghum, Gogo Station, Western Australia. Source: CSIRO The Northern Australia Water Resource Assessment Team Project Director Peter Stone Project Leaders Chris Chilcott, Cuan Petheram, Ian Watson Project Support Caroline Bruce, Maryam Ahmad Communications Amy Edwards, Anne Lynch, Chris McKay Activities Agriculture and aquaculture viability Andrew Ash, Stuart Arnold, Mila Bristow1, Greg Coman, Rob Cossart2, Chris Ham2, Simon Irvin, Perry Poulton, Di Prestwidge, Clinton Revell2, Chris Stokes, Tony Webster, Bob Williams1, Stephen Yeates Climate Cuan Petheram, Daniel Aramini, Steve Charles Earth observation Neil Sims, Janet Anstee, Olga Barron, Elizabeth Botha, Eric Lehmann, Li Lingtao, Tim McVicar, Matt Paget, Luigi Renzullo, Catherine Ticehurst, Tom Van Niel, Garth Warren Ecology Carmel Pollino, Peter Bayliss, Rik Buckworth, Garry Cook, Aijun (Roy) Deng, Shane Griffiths, Rob Kenyon, Adam Liedloff, Linda Merrin, Christian Moeseneder, Eva Plaganyi-Lloyd, Barbara Robson, Danial Stratford Groundwater hydrology Andrew R. Taylor, Karen Barry, Kevin Cahill, Steven Clohessy2, Russell Crosbie, Phil Davies, Warrick Dawes, Rebecca Doble, Graham Herbert3, Tania Ibrahimi, Sandie McHugh2, Declan Page, Stan Smith, Steven Tickell1, Chris Turnadge, Joanne Vanderzalm, Des Yin Foo1, Ursula Zaar1 Indigenous aspirations and water values Marcus Barber, Carol Farbotko, Pethie Lyons, Emma Woodward Land suitability Ian Watson, Rebecca Bartley, Dan Brough3, Elisabeth Bui, Rob Dehayr3, Daniel Easey1, Neil Enderlin3, Luke Finn3, Mark Glover, John Grant2, Linda Gregory, Ben Harms3, Jason Hill1, Karen Holmes4, Jeremy Manders3, Angus McElnea3, David Morrison3, Seonaid Philip, Anthony Ringrose-Voase, Jon Schatz, Ross Searle, Henry Smolinski2, Mark Thomas, Dennis Van Gool2, Peter Wilson, Peter L. Wilson, Peter Zund3 Socio-economics Lisa McKellar, Carol Farbotko, David Fleming, Andrew Higgins, Nerida Horner, Neil MacLeod, Stephen McFallan, Sean Pascoe Surface water hydrology Justin Hughes, Dushmanta Dutta, Fazlul Karim, Steve Marvanek, Jin Teng, Jai Vaze, Bill Wang, Ang Yang Water storage Cuan Petheram, John Gallant, Geoff Hodgson, Klaus Joehnk, Arthur Read, Lee Rogers Note: Assessment team as at June 1, 2016. All contributors are affiliated with CSIRO unless indicated otherwise. Activity Leaders are underlined. 1Northern Territory Government, 2Western Australian Government, 3Queensland Government, 4CSIRO and Western Australian Government Shortened forms SHORT FORM FULL FORM AEM Airborne electromagnetic APSIM Agricultural Production Systems Simulator AWRA-L Australian Water Resources Assessment – Landscape (model) AWRA-R Australian Water Resources Assessment – River (model) CMRSET CSIRO MODIS Reflectance-based Scaling EvapoTranspiration DEM digital elevation model DoW Department of Water (Western Australia) ETa actual evapotranspiration EVI Enhanced Vegetation Index GCM global climate model GDE groundwater-dependent ecosystem GIS geographical information system GVMI Global Vegetation Moisture Index Landsat TM Landsat Thematic Mapper (multispectral sensor on Landsat 5 satellite) Landsat ETM+ Landsat Enhanced Thematic Mapper Plus (multispectral sensor on Landsat 7 satellite) Landsat OLI Landsat Operational Land Imager (multispectral sensor on Landsat 8 satellite) MAR managed aquifer recharge MGSH maximum gauged stage height MODIS MODerate-resolution Imagine Spectroradiometer MrVBF Multi-resolution Valley Bottom Flatness NDVI Normalised Difference Vegetation Index NDWI Normalised Difference Water index NESP National Environmental Science Programme SRTM-H Shuttle Radar Terrain Missions SVAT Soil Vegetation Atmosphere Transfer TERN Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network TraNSIT Transport Network Strategic Investment Tool Units UNITS DESCRIPTION GL gigalitre (1,000,000,000 litres) km kilometre (1000 metres) L litre m metre ML megalitre (1,000,000 litres) Preface Sustainable regional development is a priority for the Australian, Western Australian, Northern Territory and Queensland governments. In 2015, the Australian Government released the Northern Australia White Paper, which highlighted the opportunities for development of northern Australia’s water resources to enable regional development. In particular, many rural communities in northern Australia see irrigated agriculture as a means of reversing the long-term trend in population decline and as a critical element of broader regional development aspirations. This belief is supported by evidence from the southern Murray–Darling Basin where studies have shown that irrigation production generates a level of economic and community activity that is three to five times higher than would be supported from rainfed (dryland) production. Development of northern Australia is not a new idea; there is a long history of initiatives to develop cultivated agriculture in the tropical north of Australia. Many of these attempts have not fully realised their goals, for a range of reasons. Most recently, it was highlighted that, although northern Australia’s environment poses challenges for irrigated agriculture, the primary reason that many of the schemes did not fully realise their goals is that they had insufficient capital to overcome the failed years that inevitably accompany every new irrigation scheme. The only large schemes still in operation in northern Australia had substantial government financial support at the construction phase, as well as ongoing support during establishment and learning phases. Northern Australia, however, is now seen to be located in the right place at the right time. Between 2000 and 2050, the world’s population is projected to grow from 6 to 9 billion people, and growth in food and fibre production is needed to meet an anticipated increase in demand. The majority of this growth is projected to occur in the tropics, particularly sub-Saharan Africa and South-East Asia. With two-thirds of the world’s food insecurity in Asia, sharp upward price movements in food have been identified as having the potential to result in political and social unrest. At the same time, it is projected that Asia will become home to the majority of the world’s middle class, which will result in an increasing demand for high-quality food produce from this region, although it is unlikely the region will be able to meet all future demand even with a significant expansion in irrigated agriculture. The efficient use of Australia’s natural resources by food producers and processors is likely to increase the importance of understanding and sustainably managing Australia’s soil, water and energy resources. Finely tuned strategic planning will be required to ensure that investment and government expenditure on development are soundly targeted and designed. In terms of knowledge about, and development of, the natural resource base, northern Australia presents a relatively ‘blank slate’, with few ‘legacy issues’, particularly when compared with southern Australia. This presents a globally unique opportunity (a greenfield development opportunity in a first-world country) to strategically consider and plan the development of substantial areas of Australia. Most of northern Australia’s land and water resources have not been mapped in sufficient detail to support reliable resource allocation, mitigate investment or environmental risks, or provide policy settings that can support such decisions. Better data are required to enable private investment and government expenditure on development to be soundly targeted and designed, to account for intersections between existing and potential resource users, and to ensure that net development benefits are maximised. In 2013, the Australian Government commissioned CSIRO to undertake the Flinders and Gilbert Agricultural Resource Assessment in north Queensland. This assessment developed fundamental soil and water datasets, and provided a comprehensive and integrated evaluation of the feasibility, economic viability and sustainability of agricultural development in two catchments of northern Australia. It identified several opportunities for large-scale (>10,000 ha) irrigation development, based on the coincidence of suitable soils and new water storage capacity. The assessment provides a blueprint of the data and analysis required to identify and support actionable development opportunities in northern Australia. The outcome of the assessment was to reduce the uncertainty of investors and regulators, and to give the base information to allow development to occur in a sustainable manner. However, that work covered only 155,000 km2 (approximately 5%) of northern Australia, and acquiring a similar level of data and insight across northern Australia’s more than 3 million km2 would require more time and resources than are currently available. As a consequence, the Northern Australia White Paper prioritised about a dozen regions in northern Australia where more detailed water and agriculture resource assessments should be undertaken. It also provided $15 million to initiate the Northern Australia Water Resource Assessment in the Fitzroy catchment, Darwin catchments and Mitchell catchment. The information from these Assessments will: • evaluate the soil and water resources • identify and evaluate water capture and storage options, and supply reliability • identify and test the commercial viability of agricultural opportunities, including irrigated agriculture, aquaculture and forestry • assess potential environmental, social and economic impacts and risks. The Fitzroy and Mitchell regions were identified by the Northern Australia White Paper as being suitable candidates for a large-scale assessment of the economics and sustainability of irrigated agriculture because they appear to have large areas of soil suitable for irrigated agriculture, coincident with water. The river basins to the east of Darwin were chosen because they have the advantage of being close to a major population centre (Darwin) and have already seen much interest in development. Summary The Northern Australia Water Resource Assessment will provide a comprehensive and integrated evaluation of the feasibility, economic viability and sustainability of water resource development in three priority areas in northern Australia: the Fitzroy catchment (Western Australia), the Darwin catchments (Northern Territory) and the Mitchell catchment (Queensland). Each Assessment seeks to: •evaluate the climate, soil and water resources •identify and evaluate water capture and storage options •identify and test the commercial viability of irrigated agricultural, forestry and aquacultureopportunities •assess potential environmental, social and economic impacts and risks of water resource andirrigation development. In addition, each Assessment is designed to: •address explicitly the needs and aspirations for local development •meet the information needs of governments as they assess sustainable and equitablemanagement of public resources, with due consideration of environmental and cultural issues •meet the due diligence requirements of private investors, by exploring questions of profitabilityand income reliability of agricultural and other developments. The objective of this report is to broadly outline the methods proposed for the Assessment in the Fitzroy catchment. The purpose is to openly communicate the scope of the Assessment and the proposed methods to a wide range of stakeholders, to allow them to provide feedback and engage with the Assessment team. The report also provides a mechanism for the Assessment team to acquire feedback on the proposed methods, to ensure that they are fit-for-purpose. The actual methods that the Assessment will use may differ as more information becomes available and local nuances are better understood. The final methods will be documented in technical detail in the final technical reports. The Assessment comprises the following interrelated activities, which are discussed below. Climate opportunities and constraints The climate activity (Chapter 3) will seek to characterise the opportunities for water resource development, and agriculture and aquaculture production, in the context of current and future climates. The activity will generate several variants of 125 years of daily climate series representative of a 2.2°C temperature rise relative to 1990, guided by global climate models (GCMs) from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Fifth Assessment Report (AR5) for an RCP8.5 emissions scenario. Pattern scaling will be used to transform the broad-scale GCM outputs into catchment-scale variables that can be used by hydrological and agricultural simulation models. Availability of suitable soil The land suitability activity (Chapter 4) will develop digital land suitability maps of the entire Fitzroy catchment, showing areas that are more and less suitable under different combinations of land use and irrigation systems, and aquaculture. The activity will employ statistically based digital soil mapping methods to rapidly and objectively generate 30 m × 30 m grids of a wide range of soil attributes (e.g. depth of soil, texture, pH). The digital soil mapping will be informed by a soil sampling campaign. The existing set of rules for different combinations of land use and irrigation systems, and aquaculture will be refined. The rules will be applied to the digital soil mapping grids and climate grids to generate land suitability maps of the catchment. Availability of water The availability of surface water across the Fitzroy catchment will primarily be assessed using three types of hydrological models: (i) landscape model (AWRA-L), (ii) river system model, and (iii) hydrodynamic model (MikeFlood) (see surface water hydrology activity, Chapter 5). The landscape model will be used to quantify water fluxes across the Fitzroy catchment. These fluxes will be used as input to the river system and hydrodynamic models. River system models are well suited to modelling regulated systems, and exploring how streamflow may be perturbed under future development, management and climate scenarios. The river system modelling provides an integrating framework for analysing the opportunities by which surface water development may enable regional development. Hydrodynamic models are physically based models that explicitly model the movement of water across the landscape. These models will be used to examine how large and small flood events, and the connectivity of offstream wetlands and the main river channel are perturbed by future development and climate scenarios. Interim digital soil attributes generated as part of the digital soil mapping process (Chapter 4) will be used to help parameterise all three hydrological models. Interim digital land suitability maps (Chapter 4), potential dam locations (Chapter 9) and ecological assets (Chapter 12) will inform the structure of the river system model. The latter will inform the domain of the hydrodynamic model. The groundwater hydrology activity (Chapter 6) seeks to provide a comprehensive assessment of the most promising regional aquifers in the Fitzroy catchment, in the context of identifying opportunities for, and risks associated with, groundwater resource development to enable regional development. The groundwater activity of the Assessment will conduct complementary field hydrogeological investigations to those of the Western Australian Department of Water. Investigations will target the promising regional Canning Basin aquifers (Grant Group, Poole Sandstone and Devonian Limestone) and will comprise: (i) estimating the scale and residence time of the groundwater flow systems, (ii) estimating groundwater recharge and discharge across the catchment, (iii) undertaking a targeted assessment of the potential risk of irrigation-induced salinity, (iv) examining the opportunities for managed aquifer recharge (in conjunction with the water storage activity), and (v) identifying the potential risks of groundwater extraction on known groundwater-dependent ecosystems. One of the challenges of working in northern Australia is the scarcity of data and the remoteness of the landscape. For these reasons, the Assessment will seek to use remotely sensed imagery (i.e. satellite imagery) where it can meaningfully inform the information needs of the Assessment. The Earth observation chapter (Chapter 7) details the methods that require detailed processing of remotely sensed data to generate products to help other activities achieve their objectives. This viii | Proposed project methods activity will primarily use data from MODIS Terra and AQUA satellites, and archival multitemporal Landsat imagery from the Australian Geoscience Data Cube. The work will involve mapping flood inundation (to help constrain the hydrodynamic modelling), identifying persistent waterholes (key ecological refugia and critical for Chapter 12), measuring temporal changes in waterhole turbidity (to identify waterholes that are most susceptible to development, and waterholes that may in part be being replenished by groundwater), undertaking fine-scale spatial measurements of vegetation water use (to inform vegetation water use and watering requirements), mapping the extent of riparian vegetation, plant biomass and growth (which will help inform the ecological activity), and mapping soil water content at a scale finer than is currently available. Agriculture and aquaculture viability The agriculture and aquaculture viability activity (Chapter 8) will work closely with the socio- economics activity (Chapter 10) to fully integrate biophysical agriculture and aquaculture production with an economic assessment. The activity will undertake crop and forage modelling and analysis using the Agricultural Production Systems Simulator (APSIM), the Grass Production Model (GRASP), the Northern Australia Beef System Analyser (NABSA) model, and expert knowledge and experience. Some limited field studies will be undertaken as part of this activity to assist in validating crop and forage models, and estimates of crop and forage production. Although the agricultural activity will analyse individual crops and forages to help provide fundamental information on potential yields, water use, growing seasons and gross margins, for example, the aim is not to be prescriptive about cropping systems for particular locations; rather, the aim is to provide insights on the issues and opportunities associated with developing integrated cropping or crop–livestock systems, as opposed to individual crops. The aquaculture viability activity will assess the viability of irrigated and near-shore land-based aquaculture. Tasks will include an aquaculture pond suitability analysis, using information generated by the digital soil mapping (Chapter 4) and hydrological modelling (Chapter 5). The activity will also include an economic analysis of various aquaculture enterprises, focusing on the opportunities by which aquaculture enterprises could complement irrigated cropping and grazing in the Fitzroy catchment. In conjunction with the socio-economics activity (Chapter 10), and the Indigenous aspirations and water values activity (Chapter 11), the opportunities for Indigenous aquaculture enterprises and aquaculture-related legislative constraints, respectively, will be explored. Water storage options The water storage activity (Chapter 9) will provide an overview of a variety of water storage options in the Fitzroy catchment, to help decision makers take a long-term view of water resource development and to inform future allocation decisions. The construction of inappropriate storages and incremental releases of water can preclude the development of more appropriate water storages and water development options. The activity will include an assessment of large on-farm (e.g. 2 to 10 GL) hillside dams and ring tanks. The river system models (Chapter 5) will be used to explore how the reliability of harvesting water into ring tanks decreases with increasing catchment allocation and extraction, and other factors such as pumping capacity and the threshold above which water can be taken. Digital soil maps (Chapter 4) will be used to provide information on areas that are suitable for on-farm storage, such as ring tanks. One-dimensional hydrodynamic modelling will be used to assess the water level and flow at which natural floodways (which could be impounded) begin to flow and, using the river system models, the reliability with which they flow. This activity will also seek to quantify the volume of natural wetlands and waterholes in the Assessment area – there is increasing interest in exploring the opportunities by which water from wetlands could be used for consumptive purposes while maintaining their ecological function. Finally, in conjunction with the groundwater hydrology activity, the opportunities for using managed aquifer recharge to store water below the ground surface will be assessed at a regional scale. Socio-economics of water resource development The socio-economics activity (Chapter 10) will examine the economic viability of development of water resources for food and fibre production, and the opportunities to use water for multiple purposes. Although the economics of agriculture will be examined as part of the agriculture and aquaculture viability activity (Chapter 8), the analysis will be limited to the farm scale. The socio- economics activity will extend the economic analysis to the scheme scale, using industry standard cost–benefit analysis methods. At the regional scale, econometric models will be used to examine regional socio-economic impacts of different types and scales of water resource development. As part of these analyses, the activity will apply the TraNSIT transport logistics model to quantify logistics costs, and identify logistics infrastructure bottlenecks and best-bet infrastructure investment and regulatory strategies to reduce road access issues. Information on the possible locations and scale of water resource development will be provided by the land suitability (Chapter 4), surface water hydrology (Chapter 5), groundwater hydrology (Chapter 6) and water storage (Chapter 9) activities. Information on integrated cropping or crop–livestock and aquaculture systems will be provided by the agriculture and aquaculture activity (Chapter 8). The socio-economics activity will also examine how the values, perspectives and behaviours of individuals, groups and institutions may influence the nature and structure of any economic production. It will also seek to understand the policy and regulatory environment for the assessment of water resources and development of water-dependent industries. Indigenous aspirations and water values The Indigenous aspirations and water values activity will provide an overview of key Indigenous values, rights, interests and aspirations with respect to water and irrigated agricultural development in the Fitzroy catchment. This analysis is intended to assist, inform and underpin future discussions between developers and Indigenous people about particular developments, and their potential positive and negative effects on Indigenous populations. The activity will closely align with components of the agriculture and aquaculture viability activity (Chapter 8), the socio- economics activity (Chapter 10) and the ecology activity (Chapter 12). The fieldwork component of the activity will emphasise direct consultation with Indigenous Traditional Owners of, and residents in, the Assessment area. This will be undertaken through a variety of means including telephone discussions, face-to-face interviews, group meetings and workshops. Other key components of the activity include a cultural heritage assessment, and a legal and policy analysis. Freshwater and marine ecology The ecology activity (Chapter 12) seeks to assess the potential for possible changes in flow regimes associated with new infrastructure across the Assessment area to affect freshwater and marine ecosystems. The Assessment focuses on water-related ecosystems because water developments, particularly irrigation, can result in substantial changes to streamflow, although typically water developments occupy only a small proportion of the landscape (<1% of a catchment). Impacts on terrestrial systems will be dealt with in an issues paper, which will identify future assessment priorities within the Assessment areas. Key tasks in the ecology activity will include identifying and prioritising assets in the Assessment area, for which conceptual models that capture flow–ecology relationships will be developed. A multiple-lines-of-evidence approach will be used to develop relationships between flow and ecology. These will be qualitative where information is poor and semiquantitative or quantitative where information is rich. The activity will use hydrological outputs from the surface water hydrology modelling (Chapter 5) to which the flow–ecology relationships will be applied to identify likely ecological changes to freshwater and marine ecosystems as a result of different types and scales of water resource development. Similarly, hydrological data from the groundwater hydrology activity (Chapter 6) will be used to help identify possible ecological change to key groundwater-dependent ecosystems as a result of different levels of groundwater extraction. The trade-offs of water resource development will be examined in more detail in the case study experiments (Chapter 13). Case study experiments The Assessment will also undertake a small number of case study experiments in the Fitzroy catchment (Chapter 13). Their purpose is to show the reader how to ‘put everything together’ to answer their own questions about water resource development. As well, they aim to help readers understand the type and scale of opportunity for irrigated agriculture or aquaculture in selected geographic parts of the Assessment area, and explore some of the nuances associated with greenfield developments in the catchment, and northern Australia in general. Importantly, they are not designed to demonstrate, recommend or promote particular development opportunities being proposed by individual development proponents, nor are they recommendations on how development in the Fitzroy catchment should unfold. They are, however, designed to be realistic representations, and will explore a variety of potential water resource development options and scales of development. The case study experiments will draw on information, expertise and models from all activities in the Assessment. Contents The Northern Australia Water Resource Assessment Team ........................................................... i Shortened forms .............................................................................................................................iii Units ............................................................................................................................... iv Preface ............................................................................................................................... v Summary .............................................................................................................................. vii Part I 1 1 Introduction ........................................................................................................................ 2 1.1 Northern Australia Water Resource Assessment .................................................. 2 1.2 Reporting schedule ................................................................................................ 4 1.3 Review process ...................................................................................................... 5 1.4 Past studies and links to relevant current projects ............................................... 5 1.5 Objectives and contents of this report .................................................................. 7 1.6 References ............................................................................................................. 9 2 Key concepts ..................................................................................................................... 10 2.1 Water year, and wet and dry seasons ................................................................. 10 2.2 Scenario definitions ............................................................................................. 10 2.3 Case study experiments ...................................................................................... 11 2.4 References ........................................................................................................... 12 Part II 13 3 Climate ............................................................................................................................. 14 3.1 Climate opportunities for agriculture and aquaculture production ................... 14 3.2 Generation of historical and future climate time series ..................................... 15 3.3 References ........................................................................................................... 21 4 Land suitability .................................................................................................................. 23 4.1 Introduction ......................................................................................................... 23 4.2 Soil and land assessment ..................................................................................... 26 4.3 Data management and storage ........................................................................... 32 4.4 Project outputs .................................................................................................... 32 4.5 References ........................................................................................................... 33 5 Surface water hydrology ................................................................................................... 35 5.1 Introduction ......................................................................................................... 35 5.2 Model overview ................................................................................................... 36 5.3 Model calibration and modelling experiments ................................................... 37 5.4 Surface water quality ........................................................................................... 42 5.5 References ........................................................................................................... 42 6 Groundwater hydrology ................................................................................................... 45 6.1 Introduction ......................................................................................................... 45 6.2 Hydrogeology of the Fitzroy catchment .............................................................. 46 6.3 Field hydrogeological investigations ................................................................... 48 6.4 Recharge and discharge estimation .................................................................... 49 6.5 Potential impacts of groundwater development ................................................ 50 6.6 Risk of irrigation-induced salinity ........................................................................ 51 6.7 References ........................................................................................................... 52 7 Earth observation ............................................................................................................. 55 7.1 Flood inundation and waterhole persistence ..................................................... 56 7.2 Waterhole suspended sediment ......................................................................... 58 7.3 Riparian vegetation ............................................................................................. 59 7.4 High-resolution estimates of vegetation water use ............................................ 60 7.5 Soil water availability ........................................................................................... 60 7.6 References ........................................................................................................... 61 Part III 63 8 Agriculture and aquaculture viability ............................................................................... 64 8.1 Agriculture viability.............................................................................................. 64 8.2 Aquaculture viability ............................................................................................ 72 8.3 References ........................................................................................................... 77 9 Water storage ................................................................................................................... 80 9.1 Introduction ......................................................................................................... 80 9.2 Farm-scale hillside dams and offstream storages ............................................... 81 9.3 Quantifying the volume of natural wetlands and waterholes ............................ 82 9.4 Managed aquifer recharge .................................................................................. 83 9.5 References ........................................................................................................... 88 10 Socio-economics ............................................................................................................... 90 10.1 Overview .............................................................................................................. 90 10.2 Multiscale economic assessment of water resources development for agriculture ......................................................................................................................... 91 10.3 Economic assessment of water resources development for aquaculture .......... 92 10.4 Application of TraNSIT to identify logistics infrastructure bottlenecks and opportunities .................................................................................................................... 92 10.5 Exploring stakeholder perspectives..................................................................... 93 10.6 Understanding the policy and regulatory environment for the assessment of water resources and development of water-dependent industries ................................ 95 10.7 Regional socio-economic impacts ....................................................................... 95 10.8 References ........................................................................................................... 96 11 Indigenous aspirations and water values ......................................................................... 97 11.1 Introduction ......................................................................................................... 97 11.2 Linkages to other activities .................................................................................. 98 11.3 Linkages to other research projects in the Fitzroy catchment ............................ 98 11.4 Context and consultation .................................................................................... 99 11.5 Scope ................................................................................................................... 99 11.6 Research ethics .................................................................................................. 100 11.7 Methods ............................................................................................................ 100 11.8 Data analysis and preliminary dissemination .................................................... 102 11.9 References ......................................................................................................... 103 Part IV 105 12 Ecology ........................................................................................................................... 106 12.1 Catchment overview.......................................................................................... 107 12.2 Ecology activity breakdown ............................................................................... 107 12.3 References ......................................................................................................... 112 Part V 115 13 Case study experiments .................................................................................................. 116 13.1 Rationale ............................................................................................................ 116 13.2 Proposed case study framings ........................................................................... 116 14 Reports, products, protocols and standards .................................................................. 119 14.1 Reports, products and protocols ....................................................................... 119 14.2 Standards ........................................................................................................... 119 Figures Figure 1-1 Governance framework of the Northern Australia Water Resource Assessment ........ 4 Figure 1-2 The Fitzroy catchment ................................................................................................... 7 Figure 1-3 Schematic diagram illustrating the high-level linkages between the activities ............ 9 Figure 3-1 Decadal analysis of the location and completeness of Bureau of Meteorology stations measuring daily rainfall used in the SILO database ...................................................................... 17 Figure 3-2 Decadal analysis of the location and completeness of Bureau of Meteorology stations measuring daily maximum air temperature used in the SILO database ...................................... 18 Figure 4-1 Fitzroy catchment, showing drainage, major and minor roads, and legacy soil sampling sites. ............................................................................................................................... 24 Figure 5-1 Fitzroy catchment, showing gauge location and gauge record information as at 2008............................................................................................................................................... 38 Figure 5-2 Flood extent based on MODIS data (green), and hydrodynamic model domain (red polygon) ........................................................................................................................................ 42 Figure 6-1 Hydrogeology of the lower Fitzroy catchment ............................................................ 47 Figure 8-1 Proposed market driven approach to agricultural viability and economic assessment .................................................................................................................................... 66 Figure 9-1 Schematic diagram illustrating various techniques that can be used for managed aquifer recharge, depending on the hydrogeological conditions ................................................ 85 Tables Table 1-1 Key deliverables .............................................................................................................. 5 Table 1-2 Other current projects with relevance to the Northern Australia Water Resource Assessment ..................................................................................................................................... 5 Table 4-1 Description of the covariates potentially available for use in the statistical analysis to support the sampling design, digital soil mapping attributes, and soil and land use suitability mapping. Each covariate layer has a cell dimension of 30 x 30 m. .............................................. 26 Table 4-2 Soil attributes and methods of analysis ........................................................................ 30 Table 4-3 Selection of Fitzroy catchment land suitabilities, including engineering and a selection of prospective crops in broad categories ..................................................................................... 32 Table 7-1 Spatial, temporal and spectral characteristics of selected satellite data sources that will be used in the Earth observation activity ............................................................................... 56 Table 8-1 Summary of the economic analytical approach proposed for different scales (paddock, farm, and irrigation scheme) ....................................................................................... 67 Table 8-2 Land use category and crop/forage modules currently available in APSIM that can be used in this Assessment ................................................................................................................ 69 Table 8-3 Pond types ..................................................................................................................... 74 Table 8-4 Limitations identified in preliminary aquaculture pond suitability analysis................. 74 Table 9-1 Types of offstream water storages (Lewis, 2002) ......................................................... 81 Table 9-2 Parameters likely to be included in a region-scale assessment of the suitability of infiltration-based managed aquifer recharge ............................................................................... 87 Part I Introduction 1 Introduction 1.1 Northern Australia Water Resource Assessment The Northern Australia Water Resource Assessment will provide a comprehensive and integrated evaluation of the feasibility, economic viability and sustainability of water resource development in three priority areas in northern Australia: the Fitzroy catchment (Western Australia), the Darwin catchments (Northern Territory) and the Mitchell catchment (Queensland). Each Assessment seeks to: • evaluate the climate, soil and water resources • identify and evaluate water capture and storage options • identify and test the commercial viability of irrigated agricultural, forestry and aquaculture opportunities • assess potential environmental, social and economic impacts and risks of water resource, aquaculture and irrigation development. Techniques and approaches will be specially tailored for each of the Assessment areas. It is important to note that, although these four points appear in sequence, activities in one part of the Assessment will often inform (and hence influence) activities in an earlier part. For example, understanding ecological and cultural watering requirements (the third part of the Assessment, described in Part IV of this report) is particularly important in setting rules around water extraction and diversion (i.e. how much water can be taken and when it should be taken – the second part of the Assessment, described in Part III of this report). Thus, the procedure of assessing a site will inevitably include iterative steps, rather than a simple linear process. In covering the points above, each Assessment is designed to: • address explicitly the needs and aspirations for local development by providing objective assessment of resource availability, with consideration of the environmental and cultural issues • meet the information needs of governments as they assess sustainable and equitable management of public resources, with due consideration of environmental and cultural issues • meet the due diligence requirements of private investors, by exploring questions of profitability and income reliability of agricultural and other developments. Drawing on the resources of all three tiers of government, the Assessment will build on previous studies, draw on existing stores of local knowledge, and employ world-class scientific expertise, with the quality assured through peer-review processes. The Northern Australia Water Resource Assessment commenced on 16 December 2015 and will be completed by 30 June 2018. 1.1.1 SCOPE OF ASSESSMENTS In stating what the Assessments will do, it is equally instructive to state what they will not do. The Assessments will not advocate irrigation development. They will identify the resources that could be deployed in support of irrigation and aquaculture enterprises, and the scale of the opportunity that might exist. They are designed to evaluate the feasibility of development (at a catchment scale), not to enable particular developments. The Assessment will quantify the monetary and non-monetary values associated with existing use of resources, to enable a wide range of stakeholders to assess the likely costs and benefits of given courses of action. The Assessments are fundamentally resource assessments, the results of which can be used to inform planning decisions by citizens; councils; investors; and the state, territory and Australian governments. The Assessments do not seek to replace any planning processes, and they will not recommend changes to existing plans or planning processes. The Assessments will not invest or promote investment in infrastructure that may be required to support irrigation enterprises. They seek to lower barriers to investment in the Assessment area by exploring many of the questions that potential investors might have about production systems and methods, yield expectations and benchmarks, and potential profitability and reliability. This information will be established for each Assessment area, not for individual paddocks or farms. The Assessments do not assume that particular areas within the Assessment areas are in or out of scope. For example, the Assessments are ‘blind’ to issues such as land tenure that may exclude land parcels from development. The Assessments will identify those areas that are most suited for new agricultural developments, aquaculture and industries, and, by inference, those that are not well suited. The Assessments do not assume particular types or scales of water storage or water access. They will identify the types and scales of water storage and access arrangements that might be possible, and the likely consequences (both costs and benefits) of pursuing these possibilities. Having done that, they will not recommend preferred development possibilities, nor comment on the required regulatory requirements to make those water resources available. The Assessments will not assume a given regulatory environment. They will evaluate the availability and use of resources in accordance with existing regulations, but will also examine resource use unconstrained by regulations, to ensure that the results can be applied to the widest possible range of uses for the longest possible time frame. It is not the intention – and nor will it be possible – for the Assessments to address all topics related to irrigation and aquaculture development in northern Australia, due to time and/or resource constraints. Important topics that are not addressed by the Assessments (e.g. impacts of irrigation development on terrestrial ecology) are discussed with reference to, and in the context of, the existing literature. No attempt has been made to identify such topics in this report. Functionally, the Assessments will adopt an activities-based approach to the work (which is reflected in the content and structure of the outputs and products, as per Section 1.2), with the following activity groups: climate, land suitability, surface water hydrology, groundwater hydrology, agriculture and aquaculture viability, water storage, socio-economics, Indigenous aspirations and water values, and aquatic and marine ecology. These activities will be supported by an Earth observation activity, which will apply across all of the Assessment activities. 1.1.2 PROGRAM GOVERNANCE FRAMEWORK The Program Governance Committee will provide high-level governance and leadership to the Northern Australia Water Resource Assessment (Figure 1-1). The Program Governance Committee will meet every 6 months and act as a conduit to government stakeholders in their respective jurisdictions. Each Assessment area will have a steering committee, which will guide the Northern Australia Water Resource Assessment Team. The committee will regularly report to key stakeholders on the program, and ensure that the expectations of stakeholders are considered and responded to appropriately. The Northern Australia Water Resource Assessment Team will plan, manage and deliver the Assessment. The team will consist of CSIRO staff, augmented with contracts to jurisdictions, universities and private contractors, where necessary. For more information on this figure please contact CSIRO on enquiries@csiro.au Figure 1-1 Governance framework of the Northern Australia Water Resource Assessment 1.2 Reporting schedule The contracted deliverables for each of the three Assessments are a suite of reports: • Technical reports present scientific work at a level of detail sufficient for technical and scientific experts to understand the work. Each of the activities of the Assessment has a corresponding technical report. • Three catchment reports – one for each Assessment area – synthesise key material from the technical reports, providing well-informed but non-scientific readers with the information required to make decisions about the opportunities, costs and benefits associated with irrigated agriculture. • Three overview reports – one for each Assessment area – are provided for a general public audience. • Three fact sheets – one for each Assessment area – provide key findings for a general public audience. The dates for completion of key deliverables are listed in Table 1-1. Table 1-1 Key deliverables DELIVERABLE DATE FOR COMPLETION Methods report: Fitzroy catchment 30 June 2016 Catchment reports: Fitzroy catchment 30 May 2018 16-page summary report: Fitzroy catchment 30 May 2018 Final fact sheet: Fitzroy catchment 30 June 2018 1.3 Review process As part of CSIRO’s internal quality assurance process, all reports produced by the Assessment will be reviewed. CSIRO will manage the review process in accordance with CSIRO’s ePublish protocols. Technical reports will be reviewed by at least two reviewers. Additional comment will be sought from the Western Australian Government, depending on the topic and content. A combination of external and internal reviewers will be used. After review and revisions in response to the review, each report will be sent to the Australian Government Department of Agriculture and Water Resources for final approval. 1.4 Past studies and links to relevant current projects A key component of the Assessment will be the collation and review of relevant literature, which will be a prerequisite for all activities. The methods described in this report will be modified to take into account the availability (and sometimes lack) of information on the Assessment area. The Assessment team will rely in part on the Program Steering Committee to ensure that all relevant literature is captured and to help identify local experts who should be consulted. Within CSIRO, the Assessment will link to relevant current projects, outlined in Table 1-2. Table 1-2 Other current projects with relevance to the Northern Australia Water Resource Assessment NAME OF PROJECT FUNDING OBJECTIVES TraNSIT: unlocking options for efficient logistics infrastructure in Australian agriculture Australian Government Agriculture Competitiveness White Paper Initiative To provide governments, industry, the farming community and other stakeholders with a baseline of freight transport costs between Australian agricultural value-chain enterprises, along with the capacity to identify and evaluate a range of scenarios to minimise transport costs and maximise long-term profitability Delivering capability into Northern Australia: exploring opportunities for multiple use of wetlands CSIRO Strategic Funding To examine the opportunities for using water from northern Australia’s wetlands for development purposes while maintaining wetland values NAME OF PROJECT FUNDING OBJECTIVES Cropping opportunities for northern Australia CSIRO Strategic Funding To better understand the research and development needs of corporate farming entities in northern Australia, and to do a capability audit of CSIRO’s ability to meet those needs National Environmental Science Programme (NESP) Northern Hub in the Fitzroy and Mitchell regions Australian Government To support sustainable development in northern Australia and inform practical solutions to the regions’ major environmental challenges 1.4.1 THE FITZROY CATCHMENT ASSESSMENT AREA The Fitzroy catchment Assessment Area (‘the Assessment area’) is defined by the Fitzroy Australian Water Resource Council River Basin. The Fitzroy catchment originates in the King Leopold Ranges and drains into King Sound south of Derby, encompassing an area of 94,000 km2 (Department of Water, 2009). The main population centres in this catchment include Derby and Fitzroy Crossing. The Fitzroy catchment has highly seasonal rainfall, resulting in approximately 90% of the annual average rainfall occurring between November and April (CSIRO, 2009; CENRM, 2010). The wet–dry patterns of rainfall result in highly variable river flows between the wet and dry seasons, with 97% of runoff occurring between November and April (CSIRO, 2009). Potential evaporation within the catchment exceeds that of rainfall by approximately four times (CSIRO, 2009). During wet-season flooding, the Fitzroy River can extend to 15 km in width (Petheram et al., 2014), whereas, in the dry season, large sections of the river are reduced to a series of disconnected waterholes (CENRM, 2010). The ecology of the Fitzroy River is adapted to this strong seasonality in river flows (CENRM, 2010). The main land use in the Assessment area is pastoralism, with large grazing leases with cattle on native pastures, shrubs, and introduced forages and legumes (although limited in extent). The land types and climate generally support breeding operations with limited capacity to fatten cattle. As a result, most cattle are sent to live export through the ports of Broome and Wyndham. There has been some development of farming along the alluvial land types of the Fitzroy River valley, mostly in the western end of the river valley. Current Western Australian Government policy and funding programs encourage the development of small-scale mosaic irrigation developments in the west Kimberley region. The population in the catchment is sparse, and there are no major urban population centres. For more information on this figure please contact CSIRO on enquiries@csiro.au Figure 1-2 The Fitzroy catchment 1.5 Objectives and contents of this report The objective of this report is to outline the methods proposed for the Fitzroy catchment. The purpose is to openly communicate the scope of the Assessment and the proposed methods to a wide range of stakeholders, to allow them to provide feedback and engage with the Assessment team. The report also provides a mechanism for the Assessment team to acquire feedback on the proposed methods, to ensure that they are fit-for-purpose. The actual methods that the Assessment will use may differ as more information becomes available, and will be documented in detail in the technical reports. The Assessment is divided into 16 activities. Figure 1-3 illustrates the high-level linkages between the activities (in the blue boxes) and the general flow of information in the Assessment. Figure 1-3 does not seek to capture all linkages and dependencies between activities. This report is structured to align with the following three central questions (in italics below) that encompass the four deliverable points listed in Section 1.1, as well as the activities shown in Figure 1-3. • Part I – Introduction provides an overview of the Fitzroy catchment, and defines the Assessment area and key concepts. – Chapter 1 – Introduction – Chapter 2 – Key concepts. • Part II – Resource assessment addresses the question ‘What soil and water resources are available to support regional development?’ by describing the information and methods needed to identify, map and quantify the available soil and water resources. The following Chapters present methods in Part II: – Chapter 3 – Climate – Chapter 4 – Land suitability – Chapter 5 – Surface water hydrology – Chapter 6 – Groundwater hydrology – Chapter 7 – Earth observation. • Part III Economic viability addresses the question ‘What are the opportunities by which water resource development may enable regional development?’ by evaluating the opportunities for agriculture and aquaculture, water storage, and supply of water for multiple uses, including urban and hydro-electric power generation. It also evaluates the economic costs and benefits, and regional socio-economic impacts of these opportunities. The following Chapters present methods in Part III: – Chapter 8 – Agricultural and aquaculture viability – Chapter 9 – Water storage – Chapter 10 – Socio-economics – Chapter 11 – Indigenous aspirations and water values. • Part IV – Achieve a balance between competing priorities by addressing the question ‘How can development opportunities be maximised by understanding and quantifying trade-offs with existing industries and ecosystems?’ The following activity presents methods in Part IV: – Chapter 12 – Aquatic, riparian and marine ecology. • Part V – Case study experiments, reports, key protocols and standards describes the rationale for undertaking case studies, summarises the reports that will be delivered by the Assessment, and outlines key protocols for data management. – Chapter 13 – Case study experiments – Chapter 14 – Reports, products, protocols and standards. For more information on this figure please contact CSIRO on enquiries@csiro.au Figure 1-3 Schematic diagram illustrating the high-level linkages between the activities 1.6 References CENRM (2010) Fitzroy River catchment management plan. Centre of Excellence in Natural Resource Management, University of Western Australia, Perth. CSIRO (2009) Water in the Timor Sea Drainage Division. A report to the Australian Government from the CSIRO Northern Australia Sustainable Yields Project. CSIRO Water for a Healthy Country Flagship, Australia, 61–128. Department of Water (2009) Fitzroy catchment subregion overview and future directions Kimberley regional water plan working discussion paper. Government of Western Australia, Perth. Petheram C, Gallant J, Wilson P, Stone P, Eades G, Roger L, Read A, Tickell S, Commander P, Moon A, McFarlane D, Marvanek S (2014) Northern rivers and dams: a preliminary assessment of surface water storage potential for northern Australia. CSIRO Land and Water Flagship Technical Report. CSIRO, Australia. 2 Key concepts 2.1 Water year, and wet and dry seasons The catchment experiences a highly seasonal climate, with the majority of rain falling between December and March. Unless specified otherwise, the wet season is defined as the 6-month period from 1 November to 30 April and the dry season as the 6-month period from 1 May to 31 October. All results in the Assessment are reported over the ‘water year’, defined as the period 1 September to 31 August, which allows each wet season to be counted in a single 12-month period, rather than being split over two calendar years (i.e. counted as two separate seasons). This is the best option and the usual convention for reporting climate statistics in northern Australia, as well as from a hydrological and agricultural assessment viewpoint. 2.2 Scenario definitions The Assessment considered four different scenarios of climate, surface water, groundwater and economic development, as used in the Northern Australia Sustainable Yields project (CSIRO, 2009a, b, c): • Scenario A – historical climate and current development • Scenario B – historical climate and future development • Scenario C – future climate and current development • Scenario D – future climate and future development. Because the primary interest was in evaluating the scale of the opportunities for water resource development under the current climate, the future climate scenario (Scenario C) was secondary in importance to Scenarios A and B. This balance is reflected in the allocation of resources throughout the Assessment. 2.2.1 SCENARIO A Scenario A will include historical climate and current development. The historical climate data will be from 121 years (water years from 1890 to 2015) of observed climate (rainfall, temperature and potential evaporation for water years). All results will be presented over this period, unless specified otherwise. Current development is the defined here as the level of surface water, groundwater and economic development as at 31 August 2015. The Assessment will assume that all current water allocations are being fully used. Scenario A will be used as the baseline against which assessments of relative change are made. Historical tidal data will be used to specify downstream boundary conditions for flood modelling undertaken in the Assessment. 2.2.2 SCENARIO B Scenario B will include historical climate and future water resource developments. Scenario B will use the same historical climate data as Scenario A. Scenario B will use the same historical climate data as Scenario A. Future water resource development will be described by each case study storyline, and river inflow and water extractions will be modified accordingly. The impacts of changes in flow regime due to future development will be assessed and compared to other scenarios including: • impacts on instream, riparian and near-shore ecology • impacts on Indigenous water values • economic costs and benefits • opportunity costs of expanding irrigation • institutional, economic and social considerations that may impede or enable adoption of irrigated agriculture. 2.2.3 SCENARIO C Scenario C will include future climate and current development. It will be based on the 125-year climate data sequence, scaled for conditions in about 2060. These climate data will be derived from a range of global climate model (GCM) projections for a 2.2 °C global temperature rise scenario, which encompasses different GCMs from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Fifth Assessment Report (AR5) under an RCP8.5 emissions scenario (RCP8.5 is one of four greenhouse gas concentration (not emissions) trajectories adopted by the IPCC for its fifth Assessment Report (AR5) in 2014); the projections will then be used to modify the observed historical daily climate sequences. The current level of surface water, groundwater and economic development will be assumed. Tidal level data will be manipulated to reflect a sea-level rise for about 2060 (i.e. the median date at which the GCMs reach a 2.2 °C global temperature rise). 2.2.4 SCENARIO D Scenario D is future climate and future development. It will use the same future climate series as Scenario C. River inflow, groundwater recharge and flow, and water extraction will be modified to reflect proposed future development, in the same way as in Scenario B. The impacts of changes in flow regime due to future development will be assessed as per Scenario B. 2.3 Case study experiments The case study experiments in the Assessment will be used to provide examples of how information produced by the Assessment can be assembled to help the reader ‘answer their own questions’. They will also help readers understand the type and scale of opportunity for irrigated agriculture or aquaculture in selected geographic parts of the Assessment area, and explore some of the nuances associated with greenfield developments in the catchment. Importantly, the case study experiments are illustrative only. They are not designed to demonstrate, recommend or promote particular development opportunities being proposed by individual development proponents, nor are they CSIRO’s recommendations on how development in the Fitzroy catchment should unfold. However, they are designed to be realistic representations. That is, the case study experiments will be ‘located’ in specific parts of the Assessment area, and use specific water and land resources, and realistic intensification options. For more information on the case study experiments, see Chapter 13. 2.4 References CSIRO (2009b) Water in the Gulf of Carpentaria Drainage Division. A report to the Australian Government from the CSIRO Northern Australia Sustainable Yields Project. CSIRO Water for a Healthy Country Flagship, Australia. CSIRO (2009a) Water in the Timor Sea Drainage Division. A report to the Australian Government from the CSIRO Northern Australia Sustainable Yields Project. CSIRO Water for a Healthy Country Flagship, Australia. CSIRO (2009c) Water in the Northern North-East Coast Drainage Division. A report to the Australian Government from the CSIRO Northern Australia Sustainable Yields Project. CSIRO Water for a Healthy Country Flagship, Australia. Part II Resource assessment: What soil and water resources are available to support regional development? 3 Climate Climate variables are generally considered, together with soil data, to be the most important environmental factors in determining the suitability of particular locations for agriculture. And because climate is so very closely linked to hydrology and water availability, understanding of climate and its variability is especially important in assessments of semi-arid and subtropical sites in northern Australia for irrigated land use. This chapter characterises the current and future climate of the Fitzroy catchment in the context of the opportunities for water resource development, and agriculture and aquaculture productivity (Section 3.1). Section 3.2 then describes methods by which future climate time series are generated for use by the land suitability activity (Chapter 4), surface water hydrology activity (Chapter 5), groundwater hydrology activity (Chapter 6) and agricultural productivity activity (Chapter 7). Historical and future climate and development scenarios are defined in Chapter 2. The key questions that this activity seeks to address in the Fitzroy catchment include: • What are the large- and small-scale processes controlling climate? • How do climate variables vary spatially and temporally? • What is an appropriate timescale over which to assess the catchment’s water resources? • Are there decadal wetter and drier patterns in the observed record, and do they correlate with well-known modes of climate variability? • What does the paleoclimatic record tell us about rainfall variability in northern Australia’s geological past? • What is the accuracy of short-term and seasonal climate and streamflow forecasting relevant to the Fitzroy catchment? • What is the drought, cyclone and flood risk to agriculture and aquaculture? • Do sea surface temperatures, salinity concentrations and storm surges pose a risk to aquaculture production? • How climatically suitable is the Fitzroy catchment for food, fibre and tree production? • Do the recent (AR5) future climate projections indicate that the Fitzroy catchment will be ‘wetter’ in about 2060 or ‘drier’, and what is the impact on irrigation development? 3.1 Climate opportunities for agriculture and aquaculture production The climate activity will investigate the climate-related opportunities, constraints and risks to agriculture and aquaculture in the Fitzroy catchment under current and project future climates. This analysis will include examination of the: • large- and small-scale processes controlling climate in the Fitzroy catchment • spatial and temporal variability and trends of key climate parameters across the Fitzroy catchment • accuracy of short-term and seasonal forecasting of rainfall and streamflow in the Fitzroy catchment • paleoclimates of northern Australia • sea surface temperatures, salinity and storm surges in the Fitzroy catchment. These analyses will be undertaken by examining historical climate data and modelled ocean data and will draw upon other programs of work being undertaken by CSIRO and the Bureau of Meteorology and expert knowledge within these two organisations. A large source of uncertainty in assessing agriculture productivity in northern Australia is the absence of information on local-scale variability in key climate variables, such as temperature, humidity and solar radiation, which are sparsely measured. Local-scale variations in these parameters can be important to plant growth. Based on an examination of available climate data, the Assessment may install temporary climate stations to try to detect the presence and relative importance of local-scale variation in key climate parameters. 3.2 Generation of historical and future climate time series This section describes how the climate data will be generated for the four scenarios listed in Chapter 2. 3.2.1 SCENARIO A The Scenario A gridded daily rainfall, temperature, radiation and humidity (vapour pressure deficit) series for 1890 to 2015 (125 water years) will be used as input for all numerical modelling, unless specified otherwise. This time period was chosen to maximise the length of climate data, to best capture the range of hydroclimate variability (wet and dry sequences) over different time scales (annual, multi-year and multi-decadal). Before this time period is confirmed, an analysis will be undertaken to confirm that there is no evidence of a significant change in rainfall that could be attributed to a changing climate – with respect to hydrological modelling, other climate parameters are of secondary importance to the magnitude and timing of rainfall. However, it is likely that stand-alone irrigated agricultural production modelling, which is less reliant on having a long time series of rainfall than hydrological modelling, will begin simulation modelling from 1965, when the reliability of other climate parameters (e.g. temperature, radiation) improved in the observed record. A cursory evaluation of the spatial and temporal extent of the rainfall information across northern Australia (Li et al., 2009) and in the Fitzroy catchment (Figure 3-1) reveals that: • over the past 100 years, the Gulf of Carpentaria region has the best coverage of rainfall stations of all regions across northern Australia (see Li et al., 2009), although the Fitzroy catchment is not as well represented as the more southerly parts of the Gulf region • other climate variables are less well represented than rainfall across northern Australia (although typically exhibit less temporal variation and intuitively, spatial correlations are higher) (Fig 3-2) • before the 1930, fewer than ten stations across northern Australia measured daily maximum temperature. Preliminary Agricultural Production Systems Simulator modelling (APSIM) (Keating et al., 2003) in the Fitzroy catchment will be undertaken to determine whether the model results are affected by having temporally varying sparse temperature and radiation data. This will help confirm the most appropriate timescale for assessing the viability of irrigated agriculture and dryland agriculture. From these observations, a decision was made to begin historical data assessments from 1890. A two-step method will be used: 1. Compile the 1890 to 2015 daily rainfall, maximum and minimum temperature, radiation and humidity (i.e. vapour pressure deficit) time series for northern Australia on a 0.05 × 0.05 degree grid from the SILO data drill (http://www.longpaddock.qld.gov.au/silo/; Jeffrey et al., 2001). 2. Calculate the 1890 to 2015 daily areal potential evaporation series for northern Australia, on a 0.05 × 0.05 degree grid, using the SILO data drill temperature and vapour pressure data as input to Morton’s wet environment evaporation algorithms (Morton, 1983; Chiew and Leahy, 2003). Before further analysis and generation of future climate sequences, the robustness of the SILO climate data in the Fitzroy catchment will be investigated to ensure that the appropriate spatial and temporal patterns in the Fitzroy catchment were preserved during the SILO database interpolation processes. This will be done by: • spatially plotting trends in the variability of key climate parameters • identifying potential step changes in the mean and variability of key climate parameters • comparing the SILO data drill data with observed data at high-quality rainfall stations within, and in the vicinity of, the Fitzroy catchment. 3.2.2 SCENARIO B Climate inputs of Scenario B will be identical to those of Scenario A. For more information on this figure please contact CSIRO on enquiries@csiro.au Figure 3-1 Decadal analysis of the location and completeness of Bureau of Meteorology stations measuring daily rainfall used in the SILO database The decade labelled ‘1910’ is defined from 1 January 1910 to 31 December 1919, and so on. At a station, a decade is 100% complete if there are observations for every day in that decade. The Murrumbidgee catchment in south-eastern Australia is shown for comparison. For more information on this figure please contact CSIRO on enquiries@csiro.au Figure 3-2 Decadal analysis of the location and completeness of Bureau of Meteorology stations measuring daily maximum air temperature used in the SILO database The decade labelled ‘1910’ is defined from 1 January 1910 to 31 December 1919, and so on. At a station, a decade is 100% complete if there are observations for every day in that decade. The Murrumbidgee catchment in south-eastern Australia is shown for comparison. 3.2.3 SCENARIO C Global climate models (GCMs) are an important tool for simulating global and regional climate. The climate activity will provide several variants of 125 years of daily climate series, representative of a 2.2 °C temperature rise relative to 1990, guided by GCMs from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Fifth Assessment Report (AR5) for an RCP8.5 emissions scenario. However, GCMs provide information at a resolution that is too coarse to be used directly in catchment-scale hydrological modelling. For example, rainfall typically occurs too often and at too low intensity (Stephens et al., 2010). This is particularly important in tropical regions, where even high- resolution coupled climate models simulate tropical cyclones as weaker and larger in spatial extent than those observed (IPCC, 2007). Hence, an intermediate step is generally performed: the broad- scale GCM outputs are transformed to catchment-scale variables. Two fundamental approaches exist for downscaling broad-scale GCM output to a finer spatial resolution: dynamic downscaling and statistical downscaling (Fowler et al. (2007), and references therein). Dynamic downscaling is computationally very intensive, while sophisticated statistical downscaling methods (e.g. regression models, weather typing schemes, weather generators) are laborious. Numerous studies, however, also suggest that no single downscaling method is superior across a range of hydrological metrics (Mitchell, 2003; Whetton et al., 2005; Prudhomme and Davies, 2009; Chiew et al., 2010; Segui et al., 2010). In a comparative assessment of scaling methods in an area dominated by large-scale storm events, Salathé (2003) found simple scaling methods to be effective in simulating hydrological systems. For these reasons, and because climate change assessment is not the primary focus of the Assessment, a simple scaling technique – the pattern scaling method (Whetton et al., 2000) – will be used. The GCM selection process is outlined in the next section and is followed by a brief summary of the pattern scaling method. Selection of global climate models A commonly held premise of hydrological prediction is that models that are better able to simulate the past are more likely to accurately simulate the future. In an Australia-wide assessment of rainfall simulations using 23 GCMs, Chiew et al. (2009) found that there was no clear difference in future rainfall projections across northern Australia between the better and poorer performing GCMs, and that the use of weights to favour the better GCMs gave similar rainfall results to modelling using all 23 GCMs. The use of paleo-observations to determine which, if any, GCMs have the proper sensitivity in tropical regions is also of little value because tropical oceanic and terrestrial paleoclimate proxies are conflicting (Rind, 2008). To assess the uncertainty and simulate the range of future runoff predictions, future climate projections from a large range of archived GCM simulations will be downloaded from the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP5) website (http://cmip-pcmdi.llnl.gov/cmip5/). There are 42 GCMs available for the RCP8.5 emissions scenario with rainfall and temperature data; however, a small subset (10) of these GCMs do not have solar radiation and/or humidity data, which are required for the AWRA-L (Chapter 5), WAVES (Chapter 6), APSIM and GRASP (Chapter 7) modelling. Only those 32 GCMs that have data available for rainfall, temperature, solar radiation and humidity will be examined. Ultimately, three GCMs – a ‘wet’, a ‘mid’ and a ‘dry’ – will be selected for further analysis and reporting. The GCMs will be selected on the basis of ranked runoff, with the wet, mid and dry GCMs corresponding to those GCMs with the 10th, 50th and 90th percentile, respectively, mean annual runoff averaged across the Fitzroy catchment. GCMs will be selected on the basis of ranked runoff because this is the primary factor controlling water resource development. Scaling method The seasonal pattern scaling method to be employed in the Assessment will use the output from the 32 GCMs to scale the 125 years of historical daily rainfall, temperature, radiation and humidity sequences (i.e. SILO climate data), to construct the 32 by 125-year sequences of future daily rainfall, temperature, radiation and humidity. The method comprises two broad steps. The first step involves estimating the seasonal scaling factors for four 3-month blocks (December to February, March to May, June to August and September to November) for two time slices centred around 1990 (1975 to 2005) and 2060 (2046 to 2075). This is representative of a 2.2 °C temperature rise under an RCP8.5 emissions scenario. For each season and over each time slice, the total rainfall is calculated. Seasonal scaling factors are then calculated as the ratio of the total season’s rainfall over the 2060 time slice divided by the total rainfall over the 1990 time slice. The historical climate sequence will then be scaled using seasonal scaling factors. The second step involves rescaling the entire series so that it matches the annual scaling factors. This process will be repeated for each GCM, for each season and for each GCM grid cell. The method is then repeated for each climate parameter. The method of using a pattern scaling method to transform broad-scale GCM outputs to catchment-scale variables is denoted as ‘GCM- PS’. Selection of GCMs for further analysis The 32 future climate GCM-PS time series will be used as input to the AWRA-L model (Chapter 5) to generate 32 gridded time series of future runoff across the Darwin catchments; a mean annual catchment-average runoff will be calculated for each. The GCM-PS catchment-average runoff will then be ranked from highest to lowest, and depending upon the distribution of the results the GCM-PS corresponding to the 10th (wet scenario, or Cwet), 50th (mid scenario, or Cmid) and 90th (dry scenario, or Cdry) percentile values will be selected for further analysis. Alternatively if the results are heavily skewed by several outliers, GCM-PS corresponding to the 20th (wet scenario, or Cwet), 50th (mid scenario, or Cmid) and 80th (dry scenario, or Cdry) percentile values will be selected. GCM-PS models will be selected on the basis of ranked mean annual runoff because this is the hydroclimate parameter that relates most to the potential scale of water resource development. For the Cwet, Cmid and Cdry GCMs, scaling factors will be plotted across the Fitzroy catchment to check whether anomalies may have been introduced as a result of GCM grid cells straddling land and water. If anomalies are identified, seasonal and annual scaling factors from adjacent land- based GCM grid cells will be adopted. 3.2.4 SCENARIO D Climate inputs for Scenario D will be identical to those of Scenario C. 3.3 References Chiew FHS and Leahy C (2003) Comparison of evapotranspiration variables in evapotranspiration maps of Australia with commonly used evapotranspiration variables. Australian Journal of Water Resources 7, 1–11. Chiew FHS, Teng J, Vaze J and Kirono DGC (2009) Influence of global climate model selection on runoff impact assessment. Journal of Hydrology 379(1–2), 172–180. Chiew FHS, Kirono DGC, Kent DM, Frost AJ, Charles SP, Timbal B, Nguyen KC and Fu G (2010) Comparison of runoff modelled using rainfall from different downscaling methods for historical and future climates. Journal of Hydrology 387(1–2), 10–23. Fowler HJ, Ekstr.m M, Blenkinsop S and Smith AP (2007) Estimating change in extreme European precipitation using a multimodel ensemble. Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres 112(D18). DOI: 10.1029/2007JD008619. IPCC (2007) Climate change 2007: the physical science basis. Contributions of Working Group 1 to the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Cambridge University Press, United Kingdom. Viewed 2 May 2011, http://www.ipcc.ch. Jeffrey SJ, Carter JO, Moodie KM and Beswick AR (2001) Using spatial interpolation to construct a comprehensive archive of Australian climate data. Environmental Modelling and Software 16(4), 309–330. Keating BA, Carberry PS, Hammer GL, Probert ME, Robertson MJ, Holzworth D, Huth NI, Hargreaves JNG, Meike H, Hochman Z, McLean G, Verburg K, Snow V, Dimes JP, Silburn M, Wang E, Brown S, Bristow KL, Asseng S, Chapman S, McCown RL, Freebairn DM and Smith CJ (2003) An overview of APSIM, a model designed for farming systems simulation. European Journal of Agronomy 18, 267–288. Li LT, Donohue RJ, McVicar TR, Van Niel TG, Ten J, Potter NJ, Smith IN, Kirono DGC, Bathols JM, Cai W, Marvanek SP, Gallant SN, Chiew FHS and Frost AJ (2009) Climate data and their characterisation for hydrological scenario modelling across northern Australia. A report to the Australian Government from the CSIRO Northern Australia Sustainable Yields Project. CSIRO Water for a Healthy Country Flagship, Australia. Mitchell TD (2003) Pattern scaling – an examination of the accuracy of the technique for describing future climates. Climatic Change 60(3), 217–242. Morton FI (1983) Operational estimates of lake evaporation. Journal of Hydrology 66(1–4), 77– 100. Petheram C, Rustomji P and Vleeshouwer J (2009) Rainfall-runoff modelling across northern Australia. A report to the Australian Government from the CSIRO Northern Australian Sustainable Yields Project. CSIRO Water for a Healthy Country Flagship, CSIRO, Australia. Prudhomme C and Davies H (2009) Assessing uncertainties in climate change impact analyses on the river flow regimes in the UK. Part 2: Future climate. Climatic Change 93(1–2), 197–222. Rind D (2008) The consequences of not knowing low- and high-latitude climate sensitivity. Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society 89(6), 855–864. Salathé EP (2003) Comparison of various precipitation downscaling methods for the simulation of streamflow in a rainshadow river basin. International Journal of Climatology 23(8), 887–901. Segui PQ, Ribes A, Martin E, Habets F and Boe J (2010) Comparison of three downscaling methods in simulating the impact of climate change on the hydrology of Mediterranean basins. Journal of Hydrology 383(1–2), 111–124. Stephens GL, LE T, Forbes R, Gettlemen A, Golaz J, Bodas-Salcedo A, Suzuki K, Gabriel P and Haynes J (2010) Dreary state of precipitation in global models. Journal of Geophysical Research 115. DOI: 10.1029/2010JD014532. Whetton PH, Hennessy KJ, Katzfey JJ, McGregor JL, Jones RN and Nguyen K (2000) Climate averages and variability based on a transient CO2 simulation, Annual Report 1997–98. Department of Natural Resources and Environment, Victoria. Whetton PH, McInnes KL, Jones RN, Hennessy KJ, Suppiah R, Page CM, Bathols J and Durack PJ (2005) Australian climate change projections for impact assessment and policy application: a review. Viewed 5 June 2012, http://www.cmar.csiro.au/e- print/open/whettonph_2005a.pdf. 4 Land suitability This chapter describes the methods that will be followed for the land suitability activity of the Assessment in the Fitzroy catchment. The land suitability focusses on areas suitable for irrigated and other agriculture, forestry and aquaculture. The key questions that this activity seeks to address in the Fitzroy catchment include: • Where are the soils with characteristics suitable for agricultural intensification? • Are these soils located near suitable water sources, whether groundwater or surface storage? • Which crop and land use options are suitable from a biophysical perspective? • What are the soil limitations for irrigated agriculture, and where are they located? • What are the limitations for aquaculture? • Are there potential on-site or off-site impacts that will be created through intensification, such as secondary salinisation, wind or water erosion, or acid sulfate conditions? This chapter is in four parts. The first provides an overview of the land suitability activity and previous soil assessments undertaken in the Fitzroy catchment. The second part describes the methods to be used for the digital soil mapping and land suitability analysis. The third and fourth parts briefly outline data management and products produced by the land suitability activity. . In many respects the methods described here build on techniques that were developed to assess land suitability for the Flinders and Gilbert Agricultural Resource Assessment, i.e. the digital soil mapping (Thomas et al., 2015) and crop suitability modelling (Harms et al., 2015). 4.1 Introduction Land development in northern Australia is challenging because of the highly variable wet and dry seasons. Also, many of the soils are poor quality because of their age and highly weathered status (Reimann et al., 2012), and so are low in fertility and affected by salinity and/or sodicity (Webb et al., 1974). These limitations combine to make the soils susceptible to water erosion in areas of even reasonably low slope (Pillans, 1997; Brooks et al., 2009), and much of the arable land is subject to lengthy periods of flooding. There are, however, deposits of younger soils (e.g. Quaternary alluvium) that may be suitable for agricultural development. To identify these areas, it is important to first understand the spatial location and characteristics of the soils, and then assess their suitability with respect to a range of land uses, principally agriculture and aquaculture. Given the size of the Fitzroy catchment (Figure 4-1), the variability of the soils, and the budget and time frames of this Assessment, it is impractical to use traditional methods to map the soils. In any case, soil mapping has evolved in recent years, through a combination of computing advances and statistics, into a new approach called digital soil mapping. Digital soil mapping allows soil properties (variables), such as pH, sampled at specific locations, to be related to an expanding Australian database of national covariates. Covariates, which are GIS- format datasets, are selected because they directly correlate to landscape and soil properties. Examples of covariates are slope, correlating to soil depth, and rainfall deficit, correlating to leaching intensity and pH. Digital soil mapping discovers relationships at the geographic intersection of the sampled variable (e.g. pH) and multiple ‘stacked’ covariates, builds statistical models from these relationships, and then applies the models to predict (map) the variable values at all other non-sampled locations in the study area from the covariates (McBratney et al., 2003). Unlike traditional soil mapping used to map soil types, digital soil mapping produces maps of individual soil properties (e.g. pH or permeability). As a result, the approach is especially suited to land suitability assessment. A particular strength of digital soil mapping methods over the traditional mapping methods is that digital soil mapping produces spatial statistical measures of the quality of the mapped parameter (i.e. uncertainty estimation maps). For more information on this figure please contact CSIRO on enquiries@csiro.au Figure 4-1 Fitzroy catchment, showing drainage, major and minor roads, and legacy soil sampling sites. Digital soil mapping has a growing successful track record in similar assessments in Australia (e.g. Kidd et al., 2012; Thomas et al., 2015) and further afield (e.g. Behrens and Scholten, 2006; Sanchez et al., 2009). 4.1.1 PREVIOUS ASSESSMENTS There have been a limited number of broad-scale soil and land resource assessments for areas that include the Fitzroy catchment. All are based on land systems survey, which involves mapping units that aggregate distinctive patterns of soils, landform, vegetation and parent material (McKenzie et al., 2008), rather than individual soil types per se (there are only three soil sampling site data points located in the catchment; see Figure 4-1). The first survey including the Fitzroy catchment that covered the whole west Kimberley region was undertaken by CSIRO during 1954 and 1959, and published in 1964 (Speck et al., 1964). Subsequently, the soil landscapes of Western Australia’s rangelands and arid interior were published in Tille (2006). Schoknecht and Payne (2010) built on CSIRO’s west Kimberley land systems mapping using new technologies (including digital elevation models and satellite imagery) to refine land system boundaries; most of the mapping legend concepts remained intact. A desktop land evaluation of northern Australia (Wilson et al., 2009) applying existing soils, landscape and climate data showed that the ability to evaluate the potential for agricultural development in most of northern Australia, including the Fitzroy catchment, was severely restricted by a lack of suitable soil mapping themes at appropriate mapping scales. 4.1.2 ACTIVITY OBJECTIVES The three main objectives of the land suitability activity in the Fitzroy catchment in this Assessment are to: • devise a statistically robust field sampling design that most effectively captures the range of the covariates • produce maps of soil properties • produce an agricultural (or other) land suitability framework and mapping at scales that enable broad appreciation of the scale of opportunity for intensification. 4.1.3 LINKAGES TO OTHER ACTIVITIES Soil information collected as part of this activity will be available to assist crop modelling, which will be used by the agriculture viability activity (Chapter 8) to estimate parameters such as crop yield, plant water usage and deep drainage as well as providing general information on the potential of soils for agriculture and other uses. Outputs from Chapter 8 (e.g. crop yield, plant water usage, deep drainage per hectare) will be combined to generate water demand for the river system models (Chapter 5), assess the potential for rise in the watertable (Chapter 6) from surface water irrigation and inform the costs and benefits for the socio-economics activity (Chapter 10). The digital soil mapping data will also provide the basis for situating and designing hypothetical irrigation schemes for the case study experiments. 4.2 Soil and land assessment 4.2.1 FIELD SAMPLING DESIGN This section describes the approach to designing a statistically robust field sampling design. Maximum mapping reliability from digital soil mapping is achieved from a sampling design that has no statistical biases – that is, sampling that is representative of the whole spectrum of soils in the mapping area. Statistical approaches can select sampling sites from the data distributions of covariates; success (i.e. a lack of bias) is achieved when the data distribution of covariates at the sampling sites closely matches that of the covariates over the whole area. While it is highly desirable that the resulting survey design should have no biases for the reasons above, the most important criterion is that the survey must be practically achievable to complete in the time available. Very real tensions often arise between the desire for a lack of sampling bias and finite project resources, which lead to insufficient time to access all sampling sites or properly capture the full variability in the covariates, especially if some of the variability occurs in areas that are remote and difficult to access. The Assessment will apply a sampling approach that addresses these tensions. First, conditioned Latin hypercube sampling (Minasny et al., 2007; Roudier et al., 2012) of a selection of covariates (Table 4-1) will ensure that all sampling sites try to capture the range of soils in the Assessment area. Second, if sampling sites prove inaccessible in the field, alternative sites within a radius of 200 m will be available as a fall-back (Brungard and Johanson, 2015). The catchment will be divided into: (i) agriculturally promising areas (‘focus areas’), and (ii) non- focus areas. The sampling design will bias the number of field sites towards the focus areas – that is, these areas will receive a greater sampling intensity to reduce the parameter uncertainty (i.e. strengthen the mapping) in these important areas. The focus areas will be defined through a combination of input from local experts, and consideration of the soil and landscape properties as currently mapped. In a second approach to increase field efficiency, sampling sites will be restricted to within a 500 m buffer each side of roads and tracks. It is acknowledged, with sampling now restricted only to soils contained in the buffered road strips, that the ‘cost’ incurred from this action is sampling bias. The survey design will comprise 200 sampling sites. The site selection methodology will be communicated with field teams to ensure that all are aware of the design criteria and selection rationale, necessary, for example, when crews may need to select alternative sites or when dealing with other conflicts that might arise. Table 4-1 Description of the covariates potentially available for use in the statistical analysis to support the sampling design, digital soil mapping attributes, and soil and land use suitability mapping. Each covariate layer has a cell dimension of 30 x 30 m. THEME COVARIATE CONCEPTUAL PEDOGENIC RELATIONSHIP Relief Slope percentage Hillslope accumulation and erosion patterns Profile curvature Toposequence patterns Plan curvature Hillslope water and matter accumulation Multi-resolution valley bottom flatness Broad landscape deposition zones Multi-resolution ridge top flatness Broad landscape erosion zones THEME COVARIATE CONCEPTUAL PEDOGENIC RELATIONSHIP Slope focal median Dominating components of slope shape and slope accumulation zones Slope length 300 m Hillslope erosion and deposition intensity (fine scale) Slope length 1000 m Hillslope erosion and deposition intensity (coarse scale) Digital elevation model Elevation, relief, temperature, local rainfall Aspect Local heating intensity, local soil water deficits Contributing area Upslope contributing area for water and matter, broad landscape accumulation patterns Terrain Wetness Index (TWI –SAGA) Localised areas of water shedding and water accumulation Relief Local landform patterns, water and matter shedding and accumulation patterns Terrain roughness Erosion potential, soil depth Erosional surfaces Erosion potential, soil depth Parent material Weathering Index of Australia 2011 Index of weathering intensity of parent material 1:1 million surficial geology mapping Regional geology, geochemistry Magnetics Bedrock/parent material composition Gravity Bedrock/parent material composition Kaolinite Clay mineralogy, weathering intensity, geochemistry Smectite Clay mineralogy, geochemistry, hydraulic patterns Illite Clay mineralogy Radiometric Th High weathering intensity, geology Radiometric U Groundwater-affected areas, geology Radiometric K Fresh bedrock, geology Radiometric total count Weathering or freshness dominance Electrical conductivity Landscape/hillslope groundwater and slope process patterns, geology Total Na Landscape/hillslope slope process patterns, geology Total K Landscape/hillslope slope process patterns, geology Vegetation National Dynamic Land Cover dataset Vegetation class, nutrient cycling Enhanced Vegetation Index Vegetation seasonality, plant community distributions Normalised Difference Vegetation Index (Landsat) Photosynthetic activity Remnant Vegetation 100k Qld Vegetation class, nutrient cycling Climate Prescott Index climate surface Leaching intensity Annual rainfall (mm) Soil recharge potential Minimum temperature Soil water and thermal dynamics Maximum temperature Soil water and thermal dynamics Potential evapotranspiration Leaching intensity Solar radiation Thermal dynamics Other Landsat TM Various 4.2.2 ESTIMATION OF SOIL ATTRIBUTES Land suitability assessment requires maps of the soil attributes that are important for the land uses being assessed. For the digital soil mapping approach being used (see below) these attributes should be estimated at each sampling site. Many attributes will be estimated from observations of field morphology using standard descriptions found in the Field Handbook (National Committee on Soil and Terrain, 2009). Other attributes will be estimated using mid-infrared spectroscopy (MIR) of small soil specimens taken from specified depths at all sampling sites. MIR has an advantage over conventional laboratory analysis because the MIR spectrum of a specimen can be acquired in only a few minutes and can be used to estimate a range of attributes, making it cost-effective to obtain spectra from all soil layers at all sampling sites. MIR allows a quantitative estimation of attributes such as clay silt and sand contents, pH, cation exchange capacity, exchangeable cations, organic carbon, and moisture content at 15 bar potential. For those soil attributes that can be estimated using MIR, the quantitative estimates from MIR are preferable to the categorical estimates provided from field descriptions because the resulting digital soil maps can show how the attribute changes continuously over the landscape. In addition, the estimates are less subjective, especially since statistical methods can be used to remove any poor quality estimates. Estimation of soil attributes requires development of a calibration for each attribute that uses conventional laboratory analysis (Rayment and Lyons, 2011) from a small subset of specimens. It is important that the specimens selected for calibration cover the full range of MIR spectra for the catchment. However, because of the extra field time required to take a large, bag specimen for conventional analysis, it is necessary to select in advance those sampling sites where calibration specimens will be taken. A two-stage approach will be used. The first stage involves using the same conditioned Latin hypercube method described above and selecting a random subset of 35 sites (17.5 %) of the 200 sampling sites that cover as wide a range of landscape positions as possible. Specimens for conventional analysis will be taken from the standard depths at these sites. In the second stage, MIR spectra will be acquired for all the specimens from the first stage and a statistical procedure used to select a subset of about 40% that best represent the range of MIR spectra. This subset will then be sent for conventional analysis, the results of which will be used to develop the calibrations. 4.2.3 DIGITAL SOIL MAPPING This section describes the approach to the production of maps of soil properties. Thomas et al. (2015) described the application of digital soil mapping to large northern Australian catchments, and this forms the basis of the method used in this Assessment. The digital soil mapping will rely on a suite of approaches combining environmental correlation and data mining. Successful adaptations of these statistical techniques include piecewise linear regression decision trees, using the Cubist toolset (Holmes et al., 1999) to predict continuous variables (e.g. pH, organic carbon), and using the C5 toolset (RuleQuest, 2006) for categorical variables (e.g. rock/non-rocky classes). The attraction of these approaches, in addition to their proven predictive power, is that they generate model outputs that allow scientists to interact and query the models from a pedogenic perspective. Other machine learning approaches may be tested, including DSMART (Odgers et al., 2014) or Random Forests (Hothorn et al., 2006). All covariates in Table 4-1 will be considered in the digital soil mapping because toolsets such as Cubist exploit covariates in proportion to the level of their predictive support, and there is no ‘dilution’ of overall predictive power caused by weaker covariates. Reliability maps will be generated to accompany the prediction maps, allowing users to objectively assess: (i) the overall reliability of the map (e.g. concordance coefficient), and (ii) the spatial distribution of prediction errors. Approximately 20% of sample sites will be withheld from model creation to allow independent accuracy testing (e.g. concordance coefficient) that illustrates the relationship between the predicted and the measured values, which if perfect, would be a 1:1 relationship. 4.2.4 FIELD METHODS The soil survey will involve collection of new field observations and samples. Sampling will involve using a vehicle-mounted coring rig to sample to a maximum depth of 1.5 m (or refusal). Samples will be taken at depth intervals of 0 to 0.1, 0.2 to 0.3, 0.5 to 0.6, 0.8 to 0.9, 1.1 to 1.2 and 1.4 to 1.5 m. To secure sufficient soil bulk for chemical analyses (Rayment and Lyons, 2011), three cores will be collected within 1 m diameter, and the depth–interval samples will be combined and bagged. Rapid field testing will be done in-situ, including dispersion (sodicity) and electrical conductivity (salinity) measurements. Site and soil information will be entered into field sheets, applying Australian descriptions (National Committee on Soil and Terrain, 2009) and soil classification standards (Isbell and CSIRO, 2016). Four field trips will be made to the Fitzroy catchment during the 2016 dry season to collect soil and landscape data. A final field trip, for validation, is scheduled for the 2017 dry season. Table 4-2 shows the soil attributes that will be determined through quantitative and qualitative methods in the field or laboratory, and mapped using digital soil mapping. These, in turn, support the land suitability modelling described below. Table 4-2 Soil attributes and methods of analysis ATTRIBUTE METHOD PURPOSE Quantitative soil attribute Soil type Field assessment Defined soil type from the Australian Soil Classification, allows communication and correlation Soil depth restriction (before 1.5 m) Measured in field at depths of 0.5, 1 and 1.5 m Defining characteristic of the soil; driver for a range of other attributes, including rooting depth Organic carbon Measured in laboratory Affects plant available water capacity, erosion and fertility Percentage of clay Measured in laboratory Affects plant available water capacity, erosion, workability and adhesiveness Clay type Measured in laboratory Affects plant available water capacity, workability and adhesiveness Percentage of fine sand Measured in laboratory Affects plant available water capacity, erosion, workability and adhesiveness Percentage of coarse sand Measured in laboratory Affects plant available water capacity, erosion, workability and adhesiveness Percentage of silt Measured in laboratory Affects plant available water capacity, erosion, workability and adhesiveness pH Measured in field and laboratory Affects plant available water capacity and nutrient toxicities Electrical conductivity Measured in field and laboratory Affects plant available water capacity and salinity Cations Measured in laboratory Affects nutrient supply Soil water characteristics Measured in laboratory Affect plant available water capacity Bulk density and porosity Measured in field and laboratory, and estimated by pedotransfer function Affects plant available water capacity, impermeable layers, workability and erosion risk Qualitative soil attribute Permeability Field observation Describes ability of soil to transmit water internally and influences soil wetness and rooting depth Dispersion class Measured in field Affects erosion Wetness/drainage Field observation Describes ability of soil to transmit water Field texture Field observation Influences soil physical properties Rockiness Field observation Influences crop types and management factors Surface structure Field observation Affects infiltration, erosion and workability Rooting depth Recorded in field as depth to impermeable layers or bedrock Determines plant available water capacity Plant available water capacity Pedotransfer function Measure of the amount of water available to plants 4.2.5 LAND SUITABILITY MODELLING This section describes the approach to the agricultural (or other) land suitability framework. Following collection of the new soil data, the suitability of each of the land uses will be determined using the framework for land evaluation of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO, 1976). This framework was applied in earlier Flinders and Gilbert Agricultural Resource Assessment land suitability modelling (Harms et al., 2015). Land suitability is the fitness of a given area for a land use type. It is commonly expressed as a set of discrete classes, from Class 1 (completely suited) to Class 5 (completely unsuited). The first stage in land suitability assessment is constructing rules that reflect the effect of various soil and land properties on a given land use. The effect of each attribute is ranked as follows: 1. Attribute poses no significant limitation to sustained application of the specified use. 2. Attribute poses a minor limitation to the sustained application of the specified use that will cause a minor reduction of productivity or benefits and will not raise inputs above an acceptable level. 3. Attribute poses a major limitation to the sustained application of the specified use that reduces productivity or benefits and increases required inputs to the extent that the overall advantage to be gained from the use, although still attractive, will be significantly less than from Class 1 or 2 land. 4. Attribute poses a severe limitation to the sustained application of the specified use that so reduces productivity and benefits, or increases required inputs, that this expenditure will be only marginally justified. 5. Attribute poses such a severe limitation that it precludes the sustained application of the specified use. Next, the soil and landscape attributes at each location (in this case, in each mapping pixel) are scored for a given land use using the rules above. Finally, the overall suitability is determined, usually on the basis of the most limiting attribute using the following classes: 1. Highly suitable land with no significant limitations to sustained application of the specified use. 2. Suitable land with minor limitations to the sustained application of the specified use that will cause a minor reduction of productivity or benefits and will not raise inputs above an acceptable level. 3. Moderately suitable land with major limitations to the sustained application of the specified use that reduce productivity or benefits and increase required inputs to the extent that the overall advantage to be gained from the use, although still attractive, will be significantly less than from Class 1 or 2 land. 4. Marginally suitable land with severe limitations to the sustained application of the specified use that so reduce productivity and benefits, or increase required inputs, that this expenditure will be only marginally justified. 5. Unsuitable land with such severe limitations that they preclude the sustained application of the specified use. Land suitability assessments use the underlying assumption that the most limiting factor determines the overall suitability rating. The land suitability modelling in the Assessment will apply a set of rules to the spatial attribute data produced by the digital soil mapping (Table 4-2). For example, it may be that land is unsuitable for a particular crop if the pH of the surface soil is greater than 8.5. Land suitability will be determined for a selection of promising crops under dryland or furrow, spray, trickle, flood and rainfed irrigation systems (Table 4-3), and crops put forward in the market development work undertaken by Coriolis (DAFWA, 2015). The suitability of land will also be determined for engineering land uses, such as aquaculture and the building of offstream water storages (e.g. ring tanks). The land suitability activity will work closely with the agriculture and aquaculture viability activity to determine the limitations for particular crops, and the land suitability rules that will be used. Table 4-3 Selection of Fitzroy catchment land suitabilities, including engineering and a selection of prospective crops in broad categories CATEGORY LAND USE / CROP Engineering Offstream water storage, ring tanks Aquaculture Agriculture Tree crops (nuts, fruit) Silviculture, plantation (sandalwood) Cereals Forage grazing, hay silage, legumes Vegetables Food legumes Industrial crops: cotton, sugarcane Root crops 4.3 Data management and storage All soil and covariate data will be stored on the CSIRO Bowen Cloud. Analyses and modelling will be conducted on CSIRO virtual computers with sufficient computational power and storage. Archiving and data standards will follow Assessment and CSIRO guidelines. Once quality checked, soil landscape data will be uploaded into the Australian Soil Resource Information System (ASRIS, 2013). Selected samples and accompanying analyses will be submitted to the National Soil Archive. New data generated by the Assessment will be shared with the Western Australian Government and more widely. 4.4 Project outputs The primary output of this activity are sets of: (i) digital layers of individual soil and landscape properties, and (ii) digital land suitability maps for various crops under different irrigation systems. The Fitzroy catchment’s focus areas and non-focus areas will be mapped, and the maps will be supplied with uncertainty estimates that allow broad-scale appreciation of the potential for land use intensification through agriculture (typically irrigated) or aquaculture. The areas outside the focus areas will be likely to have higher uncertainty as a result of sparser field sampling. 4.5 References ASRIS (2013) Australian Soil Resource Information System. Viewed 6 August 2013, http://www.asris.csiro.au. Behrens T and Scholten T (2006) Digital soil mapping in Germany – a review. Journal of Plant Nutrition and Soil Science 169(3), 434–443. DOI: 10.1002/jpln.200521962. Brooks AP, Shellberg JG, Knight J and Spencer J (2009) Alluvial gully erosion: an example from the Mitchell fluvial megafan, Queensland, Australia. Earth Surface Processes and Landforms 34(14), 1951–1969. Brungard CW and Johanson J (2015) The gate’s locked! I can’t get to the exact sampling spot ... can I sample nearby? Pedometron 37(July 2015), 8–10. DAFWA (2015) Growing the north: market opportunities for irrigated agricultural produce from northern Western Australia. A report prepared by Coriolis for the Department of Agriculture and Food, Western Australia. FAO (1976) A framework for land evaluation. Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Rome. Holmes G, Hall M and Prank E (1999) Generating rule sets from model trees. Springer, Berlin Heidelberg. Hothorn T, Hornik K and Zeileis A (2006) Unbiased recursive partitioning: a conditional inference framework. Journal of Computational and Graphical Statistics 15(3), 651–674. DOI: 10.1198/106186006x133933. Isbell RF and CSIRO (2016) The Australian soil classification. CSIRO Publishing, Melbourne. Kidd D, Webb MA, Grose CJ, Moreton RM, Malone BP, McBratney AB, Minasny B, Viscarra Rossel RA, Cotching WE, Sparrow LA and Smith R (2012) Digital soil assessment: guiding irrigation expansion in Tasmania, Australia. In: Minasny B, Malone BP and AB (eds) Digital soil assessments and beyond. Taylor and Francis Group, London, 3–8. McBratney AB, Mendonca ML and Minasny B (2003) On digital soil mapping. Geoderma 117, 3–52. McKenzie NJ, Grundy MJ, Webster R and Ringrose-Voase AJ (2008) Guidelines for surveying soil and land resources. CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood, Victoria. Minasny B, McBratney AB and Walvoort DJJ (2007) The variance quadtree algorithm: use for spatial sampling design. Computers & Geosciences 33(3), 383–392. DOI: 10.1016/j.cageo.2006.08.009. National Committee on Soil and Terrain (2009) Australian soil and land survey field handbook. CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood, Victoria. Odgers NP, Sun W, McBratney AB, Minasny B and Clifford D (2014) Disaggregating and harmonising soil map units through resampled classification trees. Geoderma 214–215, 91– 100. Pillans B (1997) Soil development at snail’s pace: evidence from a 6 Ma soil chronosequence on basalt in north Queensland, Australia. Geoderma 80(1), 117–128. Rayment GE and Lyons DJ (2011) Soil chemical methods: Australasia. CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood, Victoria. Reimann C, De Caritat P, Team GP and Team NP (2012) New soil composition data for Europe and Australia: demonstrating comparability, identifying continental-scale processes and learning lessons for global geochemical mapping. Science of the Total Environment 416, 239–252. Roudier P, Beaudette DE and Hewitt AE (2012) A conditioned Latin hypercube sampling algorithm incorporating operational constraints. In: Minasny B, Malone BP and McBratney AB (eds) Digital soil assessments and beyond. Taylor and Francis Group, London, 227–231. RuleQuest (2006) See5/C5.0. Morgan Kaufmann Publishers Inc., San Francisco. Sanchez PA, Ahamed S, Carre F, Hartemink AE, Hempel J, Huising J, Lagacherie P, McBratney AB, McKenzie NJ, Mendonca-Santos MD, Minasny B, Montanarella L, Okoth P, Palm CA, Sachs JD, Shepherd KD, Vagen TG, Vanlauwe B, Walsh MG, Winowiecki LA and Zhang GL (2009) Digital soil map of the world. Science 325(5941), 680–681. DOI: 10.1126/science.1175084. Schoknecht N and Payne AL (2010) Land systems of the Kimberley region, Western Australia. Department of Agriculture and Food, Western Australia, Perth. Speck NH, Lazarides M, Fitzgerald K, Perry RA and Thomas F (1964) General report on lands of the west Kimberley area, WA. CSIRO, Melbourne. Thomas M, Clifford D, Bartley R, Philip S, Brough D, Gregory L, Willis R and Glover M (2015) Putting regional digital soil mapping into practice in tropical northern Australia. Geoderma 241–242, 145–157. Tille PJ (2006) Soil-landscapes of Western Australia’s rangelands and arid interior. Resource Science and Land Management Branches of the Department of Agriculture, Perth. Webb AA, Beeston GR and Hall TJ (1974) The soils and vegetation of part of the Mayvale land system in the Gulf of Carpentaria. Agric. Chem. Lab. Br. Tech. Rep(5). Wilson P, Ringrose-Voase A, Jacquier D, Gregory L, Webb M, Wong M, Powell B, Brough D, Hill J and Lynch B (2009) Land and soil resources in northern Australia. Northern Australia Land and Water Science Review. Northern Australia Land and Water Taskforce, Canberra. 5 Surface water hydrology The surface water hydrology activity uses a modelling framework to obtain water storage and flux estimates over various spatial and temporal scales across the Fitzroy catchment. The key questions that this activity seeks to address in the Fitzroy catchment include: • How much water has discharged from the Fitzroy catchment each day, month and year since 1890? • Where is most runoff generated in the catchment? • How does the persistence of waterholes relate to streamflow in different river reaches? • With what degree of reliability can increasing volumes of water be extracted in different parts of the Fitzroy catchment, and how will streamflow be perturbed downstream? • What is the optimum size of pumping system for different parts of the Fitzroy catchment? • Is surface water quality likely to constrain different types of water-dependent development? • What is the maximum flood extent, and how do flood extent and duration vary with different size events? • How do flood extent and duration change under different levels of water harvesting and large dam development? • How will projected climate change scenarios affect streamflow and water resource development in the Fitzroy catchment? This chapter provides an overview of the key surface water modelling frameworks to be used in the Assessment. This is followed by a brief description of the available data, and an overview of the model calibration and model experiment process. Examples of use of the model output are then provided, and surface water quality is discussed briefly. 5.1 Introduction Streamflow in the Fitzroy catchment is highly seasonal, reflecting contrasting wet and dry seasons. The northern and eastern parts of the catchment have more topographic relief than the eastern and southern parts, and feature significant areas of exposed rock at the ground surface. River tributaries in these areas flow through many rocky gorges. Large volumes of groundwater are contained within alluvial aquifers along the floodplain, and these have been shown to interact with the river (Harrington et al., 2011). Streamflow in the Fitzroy catchment is intermittent in most years, although some gauges along the floodplain of the Fitzroy River have less than 5% of days with zero recorded flow. There are no large instream reservoirs or large areas under irrigation in the catchment. 5.2 Model overview Three types of interdependent models will mainly be used: (i) landscape, (ii) river system, and (iii) hydrodynamic. Broadly speaking, the landscape model simulates fluxes that will be used as input to the river system model and the hydrodynamic model. Output from the river system model will also be used as an upstream boundary condition for the hydrodynamic model. Landscape models Landscape models are used to estimate the hydrological response of the landscapes (at the scale of interest). The most widely used and recognisable landscape model is a rainfall-runoff model, which features calibrated parameters, and typically estimates runoff at a point or grid cell from daily precipitation and potential evaporation inputs. More complex landscape models, such as the Australian Water Resources Assessment – Landscape (AWRA-L) model (Viney et al., 2015), also have calibrated parameters, but have spatially variable parameters for soil and vegetation, for example. These models are better suited to providing estimates of other water storages and fluxes, such as soil water and deep drainage. The AWRA-L model will be used in the Fitzroy Water Resource Assessment to simulate a wide range of landscape water fluxes, but the AWRA-L parameter of primary interest for the purposes of the Assessment is runoff. River system models The river system model aggregates runoff estimates obtained from the AWRA-L model and routs the water along a stream network. Streamflow is usually estimated at various points along the river system. These points are typically referred to as nodes, with connecting stream lines referred to as ‘links’ or reaches. Each link features various submodels to estimate in-reach processes such as routing, irrigation diversion, losses to groundwater, losses to floodplains, anabranch flow and reservoirs. Each reach or link uses inflows from reaches upstream, climate data, configuration information and calibrated parameters to estimate states related to configured processes and estimate flow at the end of the reach. The model could be used with or without a loss function to improve goodness of fit. The river system modelling activity will use two modelling frameworks in the Fitzroy Water Resource Assessment: i) AWRA – River (AWRA-R), (Dutta et al., 2015a), and ii) Source (Welsh et al., 2012). AWRA-R can be used with the AWRA-L model or a conceptual rainfall- runoff model such as Sacramento (Burnash et al., 1973). The AWRA-R model is very flexible, enabling it to be quickly modified, as a result of its simple reach-by-reach operation where each reach is simulated in full before the simulation of the next reach. The model is also designed to enable fast run times and can be used in conjunction with a variety of autocalibration routines (Dutta et al., 2015b). For these reasons the AWRA-R model will be used to undertake modelling experiments to determine the most appropriate methods for parameterising the river models. The model structure and parameters will then be transferred to the Source modelling platform. Source is Australia’s national hydrological modelling platform maintained by eWater, and is the most appropriate platform for legacy models. In transferring parameters to the Source modelling framework, comprehensive testing will be undertaken to ensure that the AWRA-R and Source models perform similarly. Where processes and computational differences cannot be resolved between the two model platforms, a separate calibration process for Source will ensure that final delivered parameters are appropriate for Source simulation. Hydrodynamic models Hydrodynamic models are physically based models that explicitly simulate the movement of floodwaters through waterway reaches, storage elements and hydraulic structures. A combination of one-dimensional and two-dimensional hydrodynamic modelling will be used to simulate flow along sections of the stream network that have tidal influence, and floodplain areas that are subject to widespread flooding. The hydrodynamic modelling will use a one-dimensional river flow model (MIKE11) and a two-dimensional floodplain inundation model (MIKE21) under the modelling platform of MIKEFLOOD (DHI, 2007, 2009). 5.2.1 DATA AVAILABILITY The surface water activity will build on work previously undertaken in the Fitzroy catchment, namely the Northern Australia Sustainable Yields (NASY) project (CSIRO, 2009). As part of the NASY project, runoff was generated using an ensemble of conceptual rainfall-runoff models (Petheram et al., 2009). In the Fitzroy Water Resource Assessment, a more complex suite of hydrological models will be used than was used in NASY because more detailed modelling is required. Furthermore, a greater length of streamflow data are now available since the NASY project commenced in 2008 and several key gauging stations in the Fitzroy catchment had their rating curves revised in 2009. The Fitzroy Water Resource Assessment will have greater data requirements than the NASY project because more detailed analysis and modelling are required to address the objectives of the Assessment, and more physically based models will be used. The primary dataset used for all surface water model calibration is stream gauge data. For the river system modelling, all available gauges in the Fitzroy catchment will be assessed for use; however, the AWRA-L modelling may also include nearby gauges. In the Fitzroy catchment, 19 separate gauge records of variable quality and duration have been identified. Most of the gauges in the floodplain have shorter records (currently around 18 years). Each station will be assessed for its inclusion in the river system node–link network. Gauge location, length of record and data quality for the Fitzroy catchment are shown in Figure 5-1. 5.3 Model calibration and modelling experiments 5.3.1 INPUT DATA AND DATA COLLECTION Climate data, as described in Chapter 3, will be sourced from the SILO database, subject to data quality checks. Soil information is required by all three modelling frameworks (AWRA-L, AWRA-R and MIKEFLOOD). The AWRA-L model will use interim grids of soil texture generated as part of the digital soil mapping process that is undertaken in the land suitability activity (Chapter 4). Using appropriate pedotransfer function (e.g. Dane and Puckett, 1994), saturated hydraulic conductivity will be estimated. The AWRA-R model will use interim digital soil mapping products to help constrain groundwater losses within the model and to determine appropriate soil parameters for the irrigation module within the model. The MIKEFLOOD model will use the interim digital soil mapping products to constrain modelled infiltration. The Assessment will use the hydrologically corrected Shuttle Radar Terrain Missions (SRTM-H) digital elevation model (DEM) as the baseline elevation dataset. However, river channels are poorly resolved by the SRTM-H DEM because it was flown in February 2000, when many rivers in northern Australia had high flows. For this reason, the SRTM-H will be supplemented using high- resolution elevation data. These data will be acquired from laser altimetry, which was flown at the same time as the airborne electromagnetics survey of the western part of the Fitzroy catchment. If required, additional data may be acquired using laser altimetry flown from a helicopter along key transects. These data will be spliced back into the SRTM-H DEM. These high-resolution elevation data are particularly useful in helping to parameterise channel features in the MIKEFLOOD model. In key perennial reaches of the river, it may be necessary to undertake a bathymetric survey (water storage activity – Chapter 9). The results will be spliced back into the SRTM-H DEM before use. Roughness information is required to parameterise the MIKEFLOOD model. This will be derived from vegetation mapping data and potentially satellite radar data. For more information on this figure please contact CSIRO on enquiries@csiro.au Figure 5-1 Fitzroy catchment, showing gauge location and gauge record information as at 2008 MGSH is the maximum gauged stage height Source: Petheram et al. (2009) It is likely that groundwater will influence streamflow along the major floodplains of the Fitzroy catchment. To account for these effects, available groundwater monitoring data will be used (if close to the streamline), from which an annual pattern of groundwater heads will be generated. The results can then be used to constrain groundwater losses from the AWRA-R river system model along appropriate reaches. These data will be used in model calibration. The inclusion of this process can enable the river system model to simulate the effects of groundwater-based irrigation scenarios on streamflow. If this approach is proves to have some merit based on experimental results, this process may be incorporated into the Source river system model. A limited number of pressure sensors may be deployed in selected persistent waterholes in the Fitzroy catchment. Waterholes will be selected in consultation with the ecology activity (Chapter 12) and the Western Australian Government, and by analysis of the Water Observations from Space (WOfS) dataset. The on-ground sensors will be used to try to establish the ‘commence to fill’ discharge and the flow required to fill selected waterholes after each dry season. This information can be used to help make the output from the river system models (typically daily time series of water fluxes) more ecologically meaningful. In consultation with the Western Australian Government, field data may be collected to help establish the physical (minimum) limits to water extraction (i.e. minimum depth and discharge at which water could be pumped) in key reaches of the Fitzroy catchment. 5.3.2 MODEL CALIBRATION AWRA-L The following modelling experiments to support the calibration of the AWRA-L model will be undertaken: • The Assessment will investigate various strategies for making best use of the available streamflow data. These will include modelling experiments to determine an appropriate data quality and length threshold for use in the calibration process. • A variety of objective functions will be explored using the Fitzroy catchment data, to best simulate both low and high flows. • A single set of parameters will be determined for the AWRA-L model for each of two approaches: – parameters calibrated to gauges across all of northern Australia – parameters calibrated to gauges in the vicinity of the Fitzroy catchment. The parameter set that proves to have the best predictive capacity will be used to estimate runoff at all locations across the Fitzroy catchment at a 5 km grid. The model parameters will be evaluated on an independent subset of catchments using various goodness-of-fit measures. For more information on the calibration routine, including objective functions and optimisers, see Viney et al. (2015). AWRA-R Calibration of the AWRA-R model will proceed as follows: • A baseline node–link network will be established for the Fitzroy catchment. This is simply the physical connection of river reaches with each other and is required to enforce the calculation order for each reach (reach models are run upstream to downstream in a workflow). This step will be influenced by the availability and suitability of gauge data, and physical aspects of the river system. For example the location and extent of floodplains may influence how many reaches are represented. Under different simulation runs, the baseline model structure will be modified to enable dams, irrigation areas and water harvesting to be assessed, as required. These modified models will be referred to as simulation models. • If experimental results warrant, gauge data will be filtered to remove any data with unacceptable quality codes. • Submodels that enable various processes (e.g. overbank flow, groundwater loss) can be switched on or off. • AWRA-L runoff estimates will be aggregated to provide estimates of ungauged flow (i.e. residual inflow) for each river reach. • The observed streamflow record in the headwater catchments will be ‘patched’ with AWRA-L aggregated runoff estimates, i.e. simulated runoff will be used where there are gaps in the headwater observed time series. • Calibration against observed flows will be undertaken using two approaches: – reach-by-reach calibration, which involves calibrating each reach to its respective gauge without consideration of other gauges. For calibration of any Source models, this approach will be used. – system calibration, which involves using an algorithm that calibrates all reaches simultaneously, and is typically used without a loss/gain function. Recent research has shown that system calibration has the potential to produce more realistic system states without compromising goodness of fit for simulated flows – that is, over-fitting can be avoided by the use of system calibration (Hughes et al., 2015, 2016). In both calibration methods, the differential evolution algorithm (Mullen et al., 2011) will be used for calibration. The objective function is a combination of Nash–Sutcliffe efficiency on root transformed values and mean annual absolute bias: ....=..1+S..................,........-................,..........2........ =1S..................,........-....................................2........ =1..·..1+S..S..................,....-................,....................................365....=.............. =1·1...... (5.1) where a range of values of . will be tested (as per Petheram et al. (2012)), n is the number of daily observations for the gauge, and m is the number of years of observation. Total bias as a part of the objective function is not favoured because of the tendency for optimisation to select parameters that correct for subperiods of poor goodness of fit, by having another subperiod of equally poor fit of the opposite sign for the residual – that is, one poor period corrects the bias of another poorly fitting period. Such behaviours are hidden by the use of total bias. • The parameter set that has the best predictive performance assessed against subperiods of stream gauge data will be used in the final calibration model. This will be referred to as the baseline calibration model. MIKEFLOOD MIKEFLOOD will be calibrated and audited against observed water levels (there are seven stream gauges within the hydrodynamic model domain), and flood maps derived from Landsat and MODIS imagery for a number of historical flood events. Landholder survey information about flood events and heights will also be recorded, and the data will be incorporated into the calibration process, where appropriate. The calibration of the MIKEFLOOD model is an iterative process in which the model parameters are manually adjusted and the simulation results are compared with observations until a satisfactory calibration has been achieved. The calibrated model will be used to assess changes in flood dynamics under future climate and development scenarios. Figure 5-2 shows a composite map of MODIS imagery, indicating the maximum flood extent in the Fitzroy catchment. Also shown is the proposed domain of the MIKEFLOOD model. 5.3.3 USE OF MODEL SIMULATION RESULTS AWRA-L As mentioned above, output from the AWRA-L model will be used as input to both the AWRA-R and MIKEFLOOD models. Runoff data from the AWRA-L model will also be used by the water storage activity (Chapter 9) to estimate the preliminary yield from large and small dams. AWRA-R The AWRA-R model will be used as the primary tool to assess the reliability with which increasing quantities of water can be extracted in different reaches of the catchment, and under different operation and management rules. The model will also be used to undertake more detailed yield assessments of large dams in the Fitzroy catchment, and to simulate downstream perturbations to flow, which will be used by the ecology activity (Chapter 12) to identify likely ecological change. Key simulated streamflow metrics will be related to the ‘commence to fill’ waterhole observations and key metrics of waterhole persistence (Chapter 7), so that the persistence of waterholes can be assessed under future climate and development scenarios. The AWRA-R model will be the integrating framework in case study experiments that are dominated by surface water development (Chapter 13). MIKEFLOOD The simulated flood dynamics across the floodplains will be analysed to provide a comprehensive understanding of inundation characteristics (extents, residence time, volume, depth, frequency) at the modelled resolution. The modelled inundation information can then be used to assess hydrological connectivity between the main river channels and offstream wetlands for floods of different magnitudes, with a range of recurrence intervals. It is anticipated that this information will be summarised in the form of a multidimensional lookup table, linking streamflow and tidal level to the duration, depth and timing of inundation. This method enables changes to the hydrological connectivity between the main river channels and floodplain wetlands to be assessed under future climate and development scenarios (Dutta et al., 2013) using the AWRA-R or Source models, which havea much faster runtime than the MIKEFLOOD model. The results will be presented in graphical format to illustrate the changes to the hydrological connectivity between the river channels and ecologically significant offstream wetlands under different scenarios. 5.4 Surface water quality Existing data on surface water quality collected by the Australian Government, the Western Australian Government, universities and other organisations will be analysed to determine whether the current quality of water in the Fitzroy catchment poses a limitation to different forms of water resource development. If warranted and appropriate, a limited field campaign may be undertaken to sample water in areas of concern. Surface water turbidity of waterholes in the Fitzroy catchment will be inferred using remotely sensed data (Chapter 7). For more information on this figure please contact CSIRO on enquiries@csiro.au Figure 5-2 Flood extent based on MODIS data (green), and hydrodynamic model domain (red polygon) 5.5 References Burnash R JC, Ferral RL and McGuire RA (1973) A generalised streamflow simulation system -- conceptual modelling for digital computers Joint Fedral and State River Forecast Center, Sacramento. CSIRO (2009) Water in the Gulf of Carpentaria Drainage Division. A report to the Australian Government from the CSIRO Northern Australia Sustainable Yields Project. CSIRO Water for a Healthy Country Flagship, Australia. Dane JH, Puckett W (1994) Field soil hydraulic properties based on physical and mineralogical information. In ‘Proceedings of the International Workshop on Indirect Methods for Estimating the Hydraulic Properties of Unsaturated Soils’. (Eds MTh van Genuchten et al.) pp. 389–403. (University of California: Riverside, CA). DHI (2007) MIKEFLOOD: Modelling of River Flooding: A Step-by-Step training Guide, DHI: Denmark; 12p. DHI (2009) MIKE 21 Flow Model: Scientific Documentation, DHI: Denmark; 60p. Dutta D, Karim F, Ticehurst C, Marvanek S and Petheram C (2013) Floodplain inundation mapping and modelling in the Flinders and Gilbert catchments. A technical report to the Australian Government from the CSIRO Flinders and Gilbert Agricultural Resource Assessment, part of the North Queensland Irrigated Agriculture Strategy. CSIRO Water for a Healthy Country and Sustainable Agriculture flagships, Australia. Dutta D, Kim S, Hughes J, Vaze J and Yang A (2015a) AWRA-R technical report. CSIRO Land and Water, Australia. Dutta D, Kim S, Hughes J, Yang A and Vaze J (2015b) AWRA-R version 5.0 calibration tools. CSIRO Land and Water Flagship, Australia. Guerschman JP, Sims N, Warren G, Arthur T and Colloff M (2009) Remote sensing of inundation. In: Overton IC, Colloff MJ, Doody TM, Henderson B and Cuddy SM (eds) Ecological outcomes of flow regimes in the Murray–Darling Basin. A report prepared for the National Water Commission by CSIRO Water for a Healthy Country Flagship. CSIRO, Canberra, 422. Harrington GA, Stelfox L, Gardener WP, Davies P, Doble R and Cook PG (2011) Surface water – groundwater interactions in the lower Fitzroy River, Western Australia. CSIRO Water for a Healthy Country National Research Flagship, Australia. Hughes JD, Kim SSH, Yang A, Dutta D and Vaze J (2015) Whole of system calibration of river models: weighting functions and their effect on individual gauge and system performance. MODSIM2015 proceedings: 21st International Congress on Modelling and Simulation. Modelling and Simulation Society of Australia and New Zealand, Australia, 2054–2060. Hughes JD, Kim SSH, Dutta D and Vaze J (2016) Optimisation of a multiple gauge, regulated river- system model. A system approach. Hydrological Processes. DOI: 10.1002/hyp.10752. Petheram C, Rustomji P and Vleeshouwer J (2009) Rainfall-runoff modelling across northern Australia. A report to the Australian Government from the CSIRO Northern Australian Sustainable Yields Project. CSIRO Water for a Healthy Country Flagship, Australia. Petheram C, Rustomji, Chiew and Vleeshouwer J (2012) Rainfall-runoff modelling in northern Australia: a guide to modelling strategies in the wet–dry tropics. Journal of Hydrology Special Edition on Tropical Hydrology 462–463, 28–41. DOI: 10.1016/j.jhydrol.2011.12.046. Mullen KM, Ardia D, Gil DL, Windover D and Cline J (2011) DEoptim: an R package for global optimisation by differential evolution. Journal of Statistical Software 40(6), 1–26. Viney N, Vaze J, Crosbie R, Wang B, Dawes W and Frost A. (2015) AWRA-L v5.0: technical description of model algorithms and inputs. CSIRO, Australia. Welsh WD, Vaze J, Dutta D, Rassam D, Rahman JM, Jolly ID, Walbrink P, Podger GM, Bethune M, Hardy JM, Teng J and Lerat J (2012) An integrated modelling framework for regulated river systems. Environmental Modelling and Software 39, 81-102 Hardy M, Teng J, Lerat J. (2012) An integrated modelling framework for regulated river systems. Environmental Modelling and Software, DOI 10.1016/j.envsoft.2012.02.022. 6 Groundwater hydrology The purpose of the groundwater hydrology activity is to provide a comprehensive assessment of the most promising regional aquifers in the Fitzroy catchment in the context of identifying the opportunities for, and risks associated with, groundwater resource development. In this chapter, methods are described by which groundwater resources will be assessed in the Fitzroy catchment. Much of the contextual hydrogeological information has already been collated by the Northern Australia Sustainable Yields project (CSIRO, 2009). The key questions that this activity seeks to address in the Fitzroy catchment include: • What types of aquifers exist? • What is the scale of the available groundwater resource? • Is the groundwater quality suitable for stock, domestic and irrigation use? • Are the aquifers suitable for managed aquifer recharge? • Which river reaches and persistent waterholes have evidence of strong surface water – groundwater connectivity? • What is the risk of irrigation-induced salinity? • What are the potential impacts on groundwater-dependent ecosystems associated with groundwater resource development? 6.1 Introduction Groundwater resources in northern Australia occur in aquifers hosted in a variety of hydrogeological settings. In general, aquifer types include alluvial aquifers of unconsolidated sediments (sand, silt and gravel) associated with rivers and their floodplains, more consolidated but permeable sedimentary aquifers such as sandstone and limestone formations, and fractured and weathered basement rock aquifers of consolidated volcanic and crystalline rocks. Many of these aquifers occur across vast geographical areas where water resources are non-prescribed and groundwater infrastructure is sparse. More often than not, the installation of infrastructure occurs sporadically, in association with individual mining or agricultural developments and occasional environmental studies. This makes understanding groundwater processes, understanding the potential for groundwater resource development and identifying risks associated with development particularly challenging. A range of data types and tools will be used to develop a sound conceptual understanding of the hydrogeology in the Fitzroy catchment. Tools include both traditional tools (drilling, aquifer pump tests and water level mapping) and novel tools (geophysics, remote sensing and environmental tracers). The work plan for the Fitzroy catchment will be individually tailored based on the level of existing data and knowledge, and in consultation with Western Australian Government hydrogeologists, universities and private consultants. Overall, the groundwater hydrology activity will comprise six overarching components: • Quantify the scale of the available resource. • Estimate groundwater recharge and discharge across the Assessment area. • Examine opportunities for managed aquifer recharge (MAR). • Assess the potential risk of irrigation-induced salinity. • Identify potential risks arising from groundwater resource development. • Develop and/or refine the conceptual understanding of the hydrogeology of the Assessment area. The opportunities for managed aquifer recharge are discussed in the water storage activity chapter (Chapter 9). The work for that activity will depend on the conceptual understanding of the hydrogeology in the Fitzroy catchment developed by the groundwater hydrology activity, which is essential for evaluating the feasibility of MAR and the techniques that are most suited to the environment. See Chapter 9 for more information. 6.2 Hydrogeology of the Fitzroy catchment The Fitzroy catchment comprises four main types of aquifers: (i) Quaternary alluvial aquifers, consisting of unconsolidated sands and gravels that border the Fitzroy River; (ii) Canning Basin sedimentary aquifers (particularly the Grant Group and Poole Sandstone), consisting of consolidated but permeable sandstone and siltstone; (iii) Devonian limestone aquifer, consisting of limestone, dolostone and occasional siltstone, and varying degrees of karstic development; and (iv) Precambrian fractured bedrock aquifers, consisting of fractured and weathered igneous and metamorphic rocks (CSIRO, 2009; Harrington and Harrington, 2015) (Figure 6-1). Data on the regional hydrogeology and the associated groundwater resources in all regional aquifers in the Fitzroy catchment are limited (CSIRO, 2009). Previous hydrogeological investigations have been limited to groundwater exploration for municipal water supplies (e.g. Fitzroy Crossing); pastoral station water supplies; and exploration wells associated with coal, lead/zinc or diamond mines (Harrington and Harrington, 2015). Most of the drilling in the catchment has ceased at shallow depths for economic reasons, with the exception of occasional exploration drilling, limiting the spatial information to areas where hydrogeological formations outcrop or subcrop. Information on recharge to, and discharge from, the regional aquifers is also limited. Recharge in most aquifers is believed to occur from infiltration of rainfall at aquifer outcrops and via inter-aquifer exchange. In addition, recharge to the alluvial aquifer also occurs from direct infiltration of flood water during inundation. Discharge mechanisms include inter- aquifer exchange and, to varying degrees, evaporation and dry-season discharge to the Fitzroy River (Laws, 1990; Lindsay and Commander, 2005; Harrington et al., 2011, 2013). Information on aquifer hydraulic properties and bore yields is limited to the sedimentary aquifers that are currently used for water supplies. Transmissivity values for the sedimentary aquifers range from 110 to 525 m2/day (Australian Groundwater Consultants, 1971; Global Groundwater, 2005), and reported bore yields range from 210 to 358 m3/day (Harrington and Harrington, 2015). Hydraulic conductivity (K) values for the alluvial aquifer estimated with slug tests range from 0.2 to 130 m/day (Water Corporation, 2012), and bore yields range from 300 to 400 m3/day (Laws, 1990). Groundwater salinity for the regional aquifers is highly variable and generally increases with depth (Laws, 1990). However, mean and median groundwater salinity for each regional aquifer, summarised in Harrington and Harrington (2015), is generally low. In summary, spatial and temporal knowledge for the different aquifer systems is generally poor. For more information on this figure please contact CSIRO on enquiries@csiro.au Figure 6-1 Hydrogeology of the lower Fitzroy catchment Source: Harrington and Harrington (2015) Currently, the Western Australia Department of Water (DoW), through the Water for Food initiative, is conducting targeted hydrogeological investigations at selected locations in the Fitzroy catchment and elsewhere in the west Kimberley. Investigations include: (i) acquisition of regional- scale, high-resolution airborne electromagnetic data, through collaboration with Geoscience Australia; (ii) implementation of a regional-scale water level monitoring network, which includes suitable existing bores, and drilling and installation of new bores at strategically selected locations; and (iii) field mapping of groundwater-dependent ecosystems (GDEs) to improve current understanding of the spatial and temporal dependence of ecological assets on groundwater. The groundwater hydrology activity of the Assessment will conduct field hydrogeological investigations that complement those of DoW, by undertaking assessments at the regional scale throughout the Fitzroy catchment. Investigations will target the promising regional Canning Basin aquifers (Grant Group, Poole Sandstone and Devonian Limestone) and will include: (i) estimating the scale and residence time of the groundwater flow systems, (ii) estimating groundwater recharge and discharge across the catchment, (iii) undertaking a targeted assessment of the potential risk of irrigation-induced salinity, (iv) examining the opportunities for MAR (in conjunction with the water storage activity), and (v) identifying the potential risks of groundwater extraction on known GDEs. 6.3 Field hydrogeological investigations Groundwater field investigations in the Fitzroy catchment will comprise several components to better understand the regional hydrogeology, and thereby provide increased confidence in identifying the opportunities for, and risks associated with, groundwater resource development. Specific components include: (i) installing up to 30 groundwater level loggers to assist groundwater level mapping and recharge estimation; (ii) sampling of up to 50 bores for environmental tracers, to quantify the scale of the flow system, and understand the source and magnitude of groundwater recharge; and (iii) drilling and installing complementary nested piezometers to quantify recharge and assess the potential for vertical connectivity. 6.3.1 GROUNDWATER LEVEL MAPPING A combination of automated water level logging data and manually dipped water level data will be used to generate a variety of groundwater level products, to indicate the direction and scale of the groundwater flow system in the most promising regional aquifers. Depending on the amount, quality and location of data, products to be produced include: i) up to 30 hydrographs, ii) a select number of piezometric cross-sections, at the kilometre scale, and iii) a regional groundwater level map. The regional groundwater level map will be produced using spatial analysis, including geostatistical interpolation methods with geographical information system (GIS) software. 6.3.2 ENVIRONMENTAL TRACERS Environmental tracers will be sampled from groundwater in the regional aquifers where the construction of existing bores has been validated and is suitable (i.e. discretely screened to one aquifer), via the drilling of new piezometers (see below). Initial planning and discussions with DoW have identified two areas of detailed environmental tracer work, again targeting the most promising aquifers. The first of these extends from north-west of Fitzroy Crossing down to the south-east of the town along aquifer outcrops (see Figure 6-1). The second area is also near outcropping regional aquifers, around Camballin and the adjacent Fitzroy alluvium. Tracers are useful tools when coupled with traditional hydrogeological data (water level, chemistry, aquifer geometry, hydraulic properties) for developing a hydrogeological conceptual model (Cook and Böhlke, 2000), particularly in data-sparse regions. Briefly, the composition of groundwater with respect to major ions and stable isotopes (d2H and d18O) is useful for identifying the source and magnitude of recharge for an aquifer, while the strontium isotope ratio (87Sr/86Sr) in groundwater can be used to identify the aquifer material (host rocks) that groundwater has flowed through. Additionally, a number of age-dating environmental tracers – including anthropogenic trace gases (chlorofluorocarbons and SF6), radioactive isotopes (3H, 14C and 36Cl) and noble gases (222Rn and 4He) – are useful for determining timescales associated with groundwater flow, allowing estimation of recharge rates and flow velocities. Previous tracer studies in northern Australia on recharge include those by Cook et al. (1998, 2001) and Jolly et al. (2013). There are numerous methods for the interpretation of environmental tracer concentrations in groundwater, from simple one- and two-dimensional analytical solutions (e.g. Vogel, 1967), to complex numerical groundwater flow and solute transport models (e.g. Salamon et al., 2015). In this Assessment, the hydrogeological conceptual model derived from existing data and new field investigations will dictate the interpretation approach to be used, starting with a simple model and building in complexity as knowledge and process understanding are acquired. 6.3.3 DRILLING AND PIEZOMETER INSTALLATION The locations and nature of the drilling program will be determined following evaluation of the airborne electromagnetic (AEM) data and lithological data in the Water Information Reporting (WIN) database, and through discussions with hydrogeologists at DoW and local drilling companies in the region. A technique for drilling will be selected based on previous successful drilling in areas with a similar variety of hydrogeological settings. A combination of production and monitoring bores will be installed for determining aquifer hydraulic properties, as well as for water level monitoring and environmental tracer sampling to characterise recharge (see Section 6.3.2). 6.4 Recharge and discharge estimation Understanding the groundwater recharge and discharge components of the water balance is important for determining aquifer sustainable yields – a crucial component of effective water resource management. However, groundwater recharge and discharge are difficult to measure, and exhibit considerable variability, both spatially and temporally. For these reasons, a variety of independent methods will be used to estimate groundwater recharge and discharge in the Fitzroy catchment. Regional-scale modelling and point-scale field measurements will be used to estimate groundwater recharge and discharge at a variety of spatial scales. Estimates of groundwater recharge and discharge from each method will be compared, and the appropriateness of the different methods for various catchment and hydrogeological conditions will be evaluated and discussed. 6.4.1 RECHARGE Methods of regional-scale recharge estimation will include: (i) a catchment water balance analysis using remotely sensed actual evapotranspiration (ETa) data (e.g. Crosbie et al., 2015), (ii) the Australian Water Resources Assessment – Landscape (AWRA-L) model (Vaze et al., 2013), (iii) soil vegetation atmosphere transfer (SVAT) modelling using WAVES (Zhang and Dawes, 1998), and (iv) published regression relationships (e.g. Petheram et al., 2002, Crosbie et al., 2010). Regional estimates of recharge will be constrained using point-scale estimates of recharge inferred from field data. The catchment water balance method relies on a water balance where net recharge can be estimated as the difference between rainfall and ETa. On an annual time scale (September to August), the change in soil water can be ignored in northern Australia. The non-transpired component of rainfall, also referred to as the ‘excess water’, then needs to be partitioned into recharge and surface runoff, based on supplementary information (e.g. runoff modelling, point estimates of recharge). MODIS data will be used to produce scaled ETa estimates on a 250 m resolution grid using an algorithm developed by Guerschman et al. (2009) (CMRSET) that incorporates a relationship derived from the enhanced vegetation index (EVI) and the global vegetation moisture index (GVMI). The MODIS reflectance, EVI and GVMI datasets will be sourced from the remote sensing activity; the CRMSET data will be calibrated locally to flux towers in northern Australia. Precipitation data will be sourced from the climate activity. The AWRA-L model is described in more detail in the surface water hydrology chapter (Chapter 5). The WAVES model (Zhang and Dawes, 1998) is a physically based model that achieves a balance in its modelling complexity between soil physics, plant physiology, energy and solute balances. WAVES has previously been used on multiple occasions to model recharge across northern Australia, including modelling of the impacts of a future climate (Crosbie et al., 2009b). The WAVES model will be parameterised using pedotransfer functions based on grids of parameters generated by the digital soil mapping undertaken in the land suitability activity (Chapter 4). Default vegetation parameters will be assigned based on available vegetation mapping. The WAVES recharge modelling will be constrained using MODIS derived leaf area index (LAI) data and point estimates of recharge derived from field data. Field estimates of recharge will be inferred using several different methods, and are most likely to be applicable at either the paddock scale or to a linear integration along groundwater flow paths (Harrington et al., 2002). These methods will include the watertable fluctuation method where monitoring bores have a sufficient amount of data available. An updated assessment of recharge using the chloride mass balance method (Crosbie et al., 2009a) will use historical information on chloride in groundwater collected by the jurisdictions and the new chloride deposition grids (Davies and Crosbie, 2016). The most rigorous estimates of recharge will be determined using environmental tracers sampled as part of the hydrogeological field investigations. 6.4.2 DISCHARGE AND VEGETATION WATER USE The Assessment will estimate localised groundwater discharge and diffuse discharge (i.e. evaporation from vegetation and soil). Methods for identifying local groundwater discharge include: (i) gauged spring flow data, and hydraulic estimation of discharge from ungauged springs; and (ii) analysis of comparisons between variations in groundwater levels and corresponding changes in stream stage throughout the dry season, to infer groundwater discharge to rivers. The groundwater activity will work closely with the surface water activity (Chapter 5) where complementary groundwater and surface water hydrographs are available, to evaluate and identify the best method for estimating groundwater baseflow. Diffuse ETa from riparian vegetation along the Fitzroy River will be estimated using remotely sensed data (Chapter 7). 6.5 Potential impacts of groundwater development Understanding the potential impacts of groundwater extraction from the alluvial aquifer on water- related ecological and cultural assets in the lower Fitzroy catchment requires a considerable understanding of hydrogeological processes, including the level of groundwater dependence of different water-related assets. The DoW Water for Food project has recently completed a GDE reconnaissance study as a first step towards understanding the level of groundwater dependence of pools in both lower reaches of the Fitzroy River and off-channel wetlands (Harrington and Harrington, 2016). This work is building on previous investigations of surface water – groundwater interaction along the Fitzroy River (Gardner et al., 2011; Harrington et al., 2011, 2013). The Assessment will synthesise the outcomes of these projects and produce some guidance about how the different types of hydrogeological data being collected (e.g. aquifer hydraulic properties, water level mapping, recharge mechanisms and rates) can be used for parameterising groundwater models, should a proponent of a future groundwater development need to investigate the impacts of groundwater extraction on GDEs. 6.5.1 ASSESSING THE IMPACTS OF GROUNDWATER DEVELOPMENT ON RIPARIAN VEGETATION To help understand how the condition of riparian vegetation along the Fitzroy River may change with groundwater drawdown, a version of the WAVES model with a modified lower boundary condition will be used. Here, a fractional leakage rate (which can be varied daily) will be introduced at the lower boundary flux, which can be considered analogous to groundwater pumping. This modified boundary condition enables the internal saturated level to move up and down in response to rainfall and transpiration demand, allowing vegetation condition to be evaluated by plotting the modelled vegetation LAI trace. If the Assessment is unable to find an appropriate dynamic root growth model, the extent to which the riparian vegetation can adaptively modify its root architecture in response to falling groundwater levels will be ascertained from expert knowledge. This may then enable consecutive simulations using WAVES with varying rooting parameters, to further explore how vegetation condition may respond to different depths and rates of groundwater drawdown. 6.6 Risk of irrigation-induced salinity The introduction of surface water irrigation developments can potentially result in increased drainage below the root zone and recharge to underlying aquifers. Enhanced recharge as a result of surface water irrigation can lead to the formation of groundwater mounds in aquifers and, in extreme cases, waterlogging and secondary salinisation. Numerous studies have demonstrated the potential risk of watertable rise (Cook et al., 2008; Petheram et al., 2008; Paydar et al., 2011) and increased discharge to adjacent rivers (Rassam et al., 2004, 2005; Knight et al., 2005; Jolly et al., 2013) as a result of increased root-zone drainage beneath areas under irrigation. For secondary salinisation to occur, there needs to be (i) a source of water, (ii) a source of salt, and (iii) a mechanism by which the salt can be redistributed in the soil profile. The risk of irrigation-induced salinity will be assessed in the Fitzroy catchment in areas where surface water irrigation developments may occur, based on opportunities identified by the coexistence of surface water availability and land suitability, as well as areas where shallow watertables exist. This will involve three tasks: (i) estimating likely ranges in deep drainage under different crops and management – on the more suitable agricultural soils in the Fitzroy catchment, deep drainage will be estimated using the Agricultural Production Systems Simulator (APSIM) model, which is being run as part of the agriculture and aquaculture viability activity (Chapter 8); (ii) undertaking a sensitivity analysis of the rate of watertable rise and groundwater discharge, with and without a river boundary condition, using analytical solutions developed by Jolly et al. (2013). These solutions can be used to calculate watertable rise and discharge to rivers based on the size and spatial location of one or more irrigation developments, amount of deep drainage, and hydraulic properties of the unsaturated zone and depth to groundwater; and (iii) an evaluation and discussion of the risk of irrigation-induced salinity, based on a high risk of watertable rise indicated by the sensitivity analysis and the occurrence of existing high salinity in soil (spatial soil salinity grids) from the land suitability activity and groundwater salinity data (estimated as part of this activity). In extreme cases, there may be a need for estimating total salt loads (including unsaturated zone salinity) with input data from various sources (listed below). If required, total salt loads will be estimated using datasets sourced from: (i) the surface water activity (irrigation water quality), (ii) the land suitability activity (spatial soil salinity grids), and (iii) data on spatial groundwater salinity and depth to groundwater (estimated as part of this activity). Estimates of salt in the unsaturated zone will be obtained from drilling (conventional or direct push) to collect sediment profiles from the unsaturated zone, with salt estimates generated by 1:5 electrical conductivity soil water suspensions. Potential areas where irrigation-induced salinity are likely to occur will be identified by the coincidence of areas with potential for watertable rise and areas where salt from the unsaturated zone may be mobilised as a result of irrigation. 6.7 References Australian Groundwater Consultants (1971) Underground water resources. ALCCO Limited. Cook PG and Böhlke JK (2000) Determining timescales for groundwater flow and solute transport. In: Cook PG and Herczeg AL (eds) Environmental tracers in subsurface hydrology. Kluwer, London, 1–30. Cook PG, Hatton TJ, Pidsley D, Herczeg AL, Held A, O'Grady AP and Eamus D (1998) Water balance of a tropical woodland ecosystem, northern Australia: a combination of micro- meteorological, soil physical and groundwater chemical approaches. Journal of Hydrology 210, 161–177, doi:10.1016/S0022-1694(98)00181-4. Cook PG, Herczeg AL and McEwan KL (2001) Groundwater recharge and stream baseflow, Atherton Tablelands, Queensland. CSIRO Land and Water Technical Report 08/01. CSIRO, Australia. Cook FJ, Xevi E, Knight JH, Paydar Z and Bristow KL (2008) Analysis of biophysical processes with regard to advantages and disadvantages of irrigation mosaics. CRC for Irrigation Futures Technical Report 07/08 and CSIRO Land and Water Science Report 14/08, Canberra. Crosbie RS, McCallum JL and Harrington GA (2009a) Estimation of groundwater recharge and discharge across northern Australia. In: Anderssen RS, Braddock RD and Newham LTH (eds) interfacing modelling and simulation with mathematical and computational sciences, 18th World Imacs Congress and MODSIM09 International Congress on Modelling and Simulation. Modelling and Simulation Society of Australia and New Zealand, and International Association for Mathematics and Computers in Simulation, 3053–3059. Crosbie RS, McCallum JL and Harrington GA (2009b) Diffuse groundwater recharge modelling across northern Australia. A report to the Australian Government from the CSIRO Northern Australia Sustainable Yields Project. CSIRO Water for a Healthy Country Flagship, Canberra. Crosbie R, Jolly I, Leaney F and Petheram C (2010) Can the dataset of field based recharge estimates in Australia be used to predict recharge in data-poor areas? Hydrology and Earth System Sciences 14, 2023–2038. DOI: 10.5194/hess-14-2023-2010. Crosbie R, Davies P, Harrington N and Lamontagne S (2015) Ground truthing groundwater- recharge estimates derived from remotely sensed evapotranspiration: a case in South Australia. Hydrogeology Journal 23, 335–350. DOI: 10.1007/s10040-014-1200-7. CSIRO (2009) Water in the Timor Sea Drainage Division. A report to the Australian Government from the CSIRO Northern Australia Sustainable Yields Project. CSIRO Water for a Healthy Country Flagship, Australia, 61–128. Davies PJ and Crosbie RS (in prep.) Mapping the spatial distribution of chloride deposition across Australia. Gardner WP, Harrington GA, Solomon DK and Cook PG (2011) Using terrigenic 4He to identify and quantify regional groundwater discharge to streams. Water Resources Research 47. DOI: 10.1029/2010WR010276. Global Groundwater (2005) Fitzroy River Lodge 2005 drilling and test pumping analysis for Fitzroy River Lodge. Guerschman JP, Van Dijk AIJM, Mattersdorf G, Beringer J, Hutley LB, Leuning R, Pipunic RC and Sherman BS (2009) Scaling of potential evapotranspiration with MODIS data reproduces flux observations and catchment water balance observations across Australia. Journal of Hydrology 369(1–2), 107–119. Harrington GA and Harrington NM (2015) Lower Fitzroy River groundwater review. A report prepared for the Department of Water, Western Australia, by Innovative Groundwater Solutions, 15 May 2015. Harrington GA and Harrington NM (2016) A preliminary assessment of groundwater contribution to wetlands in the lower reaches of Fitzroy River catchment. A report prepared for the Department of Water, Western Australia, by Innovative Groundwater Solutions. Harrington, GA, Cook PG and Herczeg AL (2002) Spatial and temporal variability of groundwater recharge in central Australia: a tracer approach. Ground Water 40(5), 518–528. Harrington GA, Gardner, WP and Munday, TJ (2013) Tracking groundwater discharge to a large river using tracers and geophysics. Ground Water. doi:10.1111/gwat.12124. Harrington GA, Stelfox L, Gardner WP, Davies P, Doble R and Cook PG (2011) Surface water – groundwater interactions in the lower Fitzroy River, Western Australia. Technical report. CSIRO Water for a Healthy Country Flagship, Australia. Jolly I, Taylor AR, Rassam D, Knight J, Davies P and Harrington G (2013) Surface water – groundwater connectivity. A technical report to the Australian Government from the CSIRO Flinders and Gilbert Agricultural Resource Assessment, part of the North Queensland Irrigated Agriculture Strategy. CSIRO Water for a Healthy Country and Sustainable Agriculture flagships, Australia. Knight JH, Gilfedder M and Walker GR (2005) Impacts of irrigation and dryland development on groundwater discharge to rivers – a unit response approach to cumulative impacts analysis. Journal of Hydrology 303, 79–91. Laws AT (1990) Outline of the groundwater resource potential of the Canning Basin Western Australia. Proceedings of the International Conference on Groundwater in Large Sedimentary Basins. Australian Water Resources Council Conference Series no. 20. Lindsay RP and Commander DP (2005) Hydrogeological assessment of the Fitzroy alluvium. Hydrogeological Record Series HG 16. Department of Water Western Australia, Perth. Paydar Z, Cook F, Xevi E and Bristow K (2011) An overview of irrigation mosaics. Irrigation and Drainage 60, 454–463. Petheram C, Walker G, Grayson R, Thierfelder T and Zhang L (2002) Towards a framework for predicting impacts of land-use on recharge: 1. A review of recharge studies in Australia. Australian Journal of Soil Research 40, 397–417 Petheram C, Bristow KL and Nelson PN (2008) Understanding and managing groundwater and salinity in a tropical conjunctive water use irrigation district. Agricultural Water Management 95(10), 1167–1179. Rassam D, Walker G and Knight J (2004) Applicability of the unit response equation to assess salinity impacts of irrigation development in the Mallee region. CSIRO Land and Water Technical Report 35/04. CSIRO, Canberra. Rassam D, Walker G and Knight J (2005) Applicability of the unit response equation to assess salinity impacts of irrigation development in the Mallee region: supplementary analyses. A report for CSIRO Water for a Healthy Country Flagship, Townsville. Salamon P, Fernàndez-Garcia D and Gómez-Hernández JJ (2006) A review and numerical assessment of the random walk particle tracking method. Journal of Contaminant Hydrology 87(3), 277–305. Vaze J, Viney N, Stenson M, Renzullo L, Dijk AV, Dutta D, Crosbie R, Lerat J, Penton D, Vleeshouwer J, Peeters L, Teng J, Kim S, Hughes J, Dawes W, Zhang Y, Leighton B, Perraud J- M, Joehnk K, Yang A, Wang B, Frost A, Elmahdi A, Smith A and Daamen C (2013) The Australian Water Resource Assessment Modelling System (AWRA). In: Piantadosi J, Anderssen RS and Boland J (eds) MODSIM 2013 Adapting to change: the multiple roles of modelling, 20th International Congress on Modelling and Simulation. Modelling and Simulation Society of Australia and New Zealand, Adelaide, 3015–3021. Vogel JC (1967) Investigations of groundwater flow with radiocarbon. Proceedings of the symposium on isotopes in hydrology. IAEA, Vienna. Water Corporation (2012) Fitzroy Crossing wastewater treatment plan. Application for Works Approval. February 2012. Zhang L and Dawes W (1998) WAVES: an integrated energy and water balance model. CSIRO Land and Water, Canberra. 7 Earth observation Challenges of working in northern Australia include the scarcity of data and the remoteness of the landscape. For these reasons, the Assessment will use remotely sensed imagery, captured from satellite or airborne platforms, where it can meaningfully inform the objectives of the Assessment. Many of the Assessment’s activities will make extensive use of readily available remote sensing products. For example, the land suitability activity (Chapter 4) will use existing airborne gamma radiometrics data as a spatial covariate in its digital soil mapping process. This chapter describes tasks that require detailed processing of remotely sensed data as part of the Assessment to produce products that help other activities achieve their objectives. This activity has five tasks in the Fitzroy catchment, each of which is described in this chapter: 1. Mapping the relative frequency and distribution of inundation, and the distribution and persistence of waterholes 2. Mapping the suspended sediment concentration of waterholes 3. Mapping riparian vegetation and groundwater-dependent ecosystems (GDEs) 4. Increasing the spatial resolution and coverage of vegetation water use maps (actual evapotranspiration, ETa), and 5. Increasing the spatial and temporal resolution of soil water maps In conjunction with discipline specialists from other activities, the Earth observation activity seeks to address a range of questions in the Fitzroy catchment, including: • Where are persistent waterholes located? • Which areas are most prone to widespread and frequent inundation? • Which surface water bodies are replenished in part by groundwater during the dry season? • Which waterholes may be particularly sensitive to nearby development? • Where are vegetation communities likely to be most sensitive to groundwater extraction? • What is the distribution of persistently productive vegetation that may be valuable as drought refuge habitat for Wildlife? • How do evapotranspiration rates vary throughout the Assessment area? The Earth observation activity will draw on a wide range of data sources, primarily satellite remote sensing technologies, that each have unique characteristics in terms of their capture frequency, spatial resolution and coverage and application domain. These attributes are summarised for some of the primary data sources in Table 7-1. Table 7-1 Spatial, temporal and spectral characteristics of selected satellite data sources that will be used in the Earth observation activity PLATFORM/SENSOR DATE FREQUENCY NO. BANDS PIXEL SIZE SWATH WIDTH (km) APPLICATION NOTES Landsat 5 Thematic Mapper (TM) 1987-1999 2003-2011 16 days 7 30m Multi (6) 120m Thermal (1) 185 Terrestrial Earth observation. Data gap 1999-2003 Landsat 7 Enhanced Thematic Mapper Plus (ETM+) Apr 1999 16 days 8 15m Pan (1) 30m Multi (6) 60m Thermal (1) 185 Terrestrial Earth observation Scan line correction failure May 2003 Landsat 8 Operational Land Imager (OLI) Feb 2013 16 days 9 15m Pan (1) 30m Multi (8) 185 Terrestrial Earth observation Terra MODIS Dec 1999 1 day 36 250m (2) 500m (5) 1000m (29) 2330 Terrestrial Earth observation Aqua MODIS May 2002 1 day 36 250m (2) 500m (5) 1000m (29) 2330 Terrestrial Earth observation AMSR-2 May 2012 1 day 7 Radar 5km x 3km (1) to 62km x 35km (2) 1450 “Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer 2” Global water cycle observation SMOS Nov 2009 3 days 1 radar ~43km 1000 “Soil Moisture Ocean Salinity” Hydrology and ocean circulation L-band radar SMAP Jan 2015 3 days 2 radar 30km (Radar) 1-3km (Radiometer) 1000 “Soil Moisture Active Passive” L-band radar (active) Radiometer (passive) ASCAT Nov 2006 2 days 1 radar 50km 2 x 500 “Advanced Scatterometer” Ocean surface wind C-band WindSat Jan 2003 1 day 5 radar 8km x 13 km 39km x 71km 350 to >1,200 Polarimetric radiometer Ocean surface wind, and water cycle Key elements of the methods that will be used to complete each remote sensing task are presented below. 7.1 Flood inundation and waterhole persistence 7.1.1 INTRODUCTION In northern Australia, the hydrological extremes have particular ecological and agricultural significance. Flooding can be catastrophic to agricultural production in terms of loss of stock, fodder and topsoil, and damage to crops and infrastructure. However, the high biodiversity found in many unregulated floodplain systems in northern Australia is thought to largely depend on ‘flood pulses’, which allow biophysical exchanges to occur between the main channel and wetlands. Also of importance is that many aquatic biota in the Assessment area survive the long dry season by using refugia provided by persistent waterholes. Remotely sensed information on flooding will be used to help calibrate and post-audit the hydrodynamic model (Chapter 5). Information on waterhole persistence can also be used, in conjunction with the river system models (Chapter 5), to develop relationships between flow and waterhole persistence. The information and models may then be used to inform the ecology activity, with respect to the likely perturbations in flooding and waterhole persistence as a result of future climate and development scenarios. 7.1.2 METHODS The key challenge for mapping surface water in northern Australia using optical images is persistent cloud cover in the wet season. Archives of time series images such as from the Landsat and MODIS satellites provide the best opportunity to observe surface water and compare inundation over time. These images will be used to produce maps that will provide fundamental information about the frequency, persistence and distribution of surface water. Inundation will be mapped at two scales. First, historical flood maps will be created using MODIS satellite imagery captured daily at 500 m resolution by the Terra (MOD09GA) and AQUA (MYD09GA) satellites. Inundation will be mapped using the Open Water Likelihood algorithm (Guerschmann et al., 2009a), which estimates the probability and/or fraction of standing water in each MODIS pixel. Pixel values range from 0, meaning that there is no water in the pixel during the month, to 100, meaning that the pixel is completely ‘flooded’ at some time. MODIS imagery is best suited to detecting inundation over larger extents, and its high temporal frequency provides the best opportunity to examine the timing and persistence of inundation. MODIS satellite imagery will be used to generate individual flood maps for every day (where available) of selected large flood events for which cloud-free images are available. Second, Landsat TM, ETM+ and OLI satellite imagery (where available) will also be used to assess flood inundation extent. The smaller pixel size of Landsat (25 m × 25 m) is better suited to mapping smaller inundation frequency, but the images are captured only once every 16 days, and the Landsat sensor cannot penetrate cloud cover. Consequently, Landsat provides less information about the persistence and frequency of inundation than the spatially coarser MODIS images, and is less likely to capture flood peaks. In northern Australia, when the dry season is usually cloud free, Landsat is better suited to identifying persistent waterholes. Landsat data have been used by Geoscience Australia to create the Water Observations from Space (WOfS) dataset, which counts – across the entire Australian continent – the number of cloud-free observations of the land surface that show open water, and provides a number of confidence statistics for surface water occurring in each pixel. The WOfS dataset will be used to show relative inundation frequency across the three Assessment areas, including the relative persistence of waterholes. Waterhole persistence mapping will require a threshold to be applied across the WOfS images to highlight the most persistent waterholes in the landscape. In addition, Normalised Difference Water Index (NDWI; Xu, 2006) images will be created from precalibrated Landsat images, which will provide flood maps for selected flood events (which currently cannot be extracted from WOfS). Thresholds to separate inundated from dry pixels in the mNDWI images will be determined in comparison with false colour images, as demonstrated in Sims et al. (2014). That study found that classifying mNDWI pixels with a value greater than -0.3 produced relatively contiguous inundation maps and minimised commission and omission errors in southern Australian landscapes. Field validation of inundation maps is likely to be impractical, but comparing inundation maps produced from a range of data sources and processing methods can assist in accuracy assessment and map interpretation. 7.2 Waterhole suspended sediment 7.2.1 INTRODUCTION The turbidity of waterholes, which affects light penetration and nutrient loads, is an important property of their ecological function. Waterholes that are relatively clear are most likely to undergo ecological change as a result of development activities that increase turbidity. Knowledge of waterholes that are naturally more and less turbid may help inform region-scale planning decisions. Furthermore, temporal changes in waterhole turbidity over the course of the dry season may be an indication of groundwater discharge, which may differ in salinity and suspended material concentrations than surface runoff. Such information may be useful to help the groundwater hydrology activity (Chapter 6) prioritise which waterholes and river reaches should be sampled for assessing surface water – groundwater interactions. Remotely sensed turbidity data will also be investigated for its potential to indicate, on a regional basis, the likelihood of clogging of subsurface bedsand dams (Chapter 9). 7.2.2 METHODS Archival multitemporal Landsat imagery from the Australian Geoscience Data Cube (AGDC) will be used to reconstruct suspended sediment time series for waterholes in the catchment. Based on the relationship between the satellite-derived reflectance and the inherent optical properties of the water column, semi-empirical algorithms can be derived for these optically complex waters to provide estimates of water quality properties. Multitemporal data from the AGDC have been processed to a consistent surface reflectance product (Li et al., 2010), which then enables large-scale time series analysis of water quality dynamics. First, a semi-analytical inversion algorithm, known as a-LMI (Brando et al., 2012), is parameterised with bio-optical measurements to estimate satellite reflectance from the known absorption and backscattering coefficients. This model then linearly resolves the water constituent concentrations (Brando and Dekker, 2003). The concentrations resolved are chlorophyll-a, non-algal particulates and coloured dissolved organic matter. A suspended sediment product is produced by combining the constituents that scatter the light: non-algal particulates and chlorophyll-a, however the concentration of these fractions can be quantified individually. Turbidity mapping of waterholes where no in-situ data exist will require calibration and validation on nearby areas where in-situ measurements have been made. As part of the Flinders and Gilbert Agricultural Resource Assessment, in-situ measurements of turbidity were made at 19 waterholes (Waltham et al., 2013), and these could be used as a calibration dataset. After calibration, the a- LMI model is applied to the historical time series of images and plots of individual waterholes to estimate suspended sediment levels over time. These will be investigated to infer which waterholes may be receiving groundwater discharge. 7.3 Riparian vegetation 7.3.1 INTRODUCTION Riparian vegetation performs a range of important functions in riverine and wetland ecosystems, including habitat provision, organic matter supply, shading and bank stabilisation. Understanding the extent and water use requirements of riparian vegetation is necessary for assessing the potential impacts of water development. 7.3.2 METHODS A time series of dry-season Landsat TM images will be collated from cloud-free observations between 1988 and 2011 for each of the study areas. These images will be converted to a vegetation index (NDVI) that is sensitive to plant biomass and growth vigour, and an NDWI (Xu, 2006) that shows relative differences in vegetation and terrain wetness. Previous studies have used a range of processing algorithms including canonical covariates analysis to identify areas of persistently green vegetation from time series images (Canty, 2010; Canty and Neilsen 2006). Recent studies have demonstrated the advantages of principal components analysis to identify the variance of vegetation greenness and wetness over time (see Dronova et al., 2015; Neeti and Eastman, 2014) which include its ease of use over larger time series and its ordering of productivity stability groups between the principal component bands. The first principal component (PC1) typically highlights persistently green vegetation areas characterised by high NDVI values throughout the time series, which typically includes riparian vegetation. Areas of more variable greenness are highlighted in the higher order PCs (PCs two and above). PC’s are uncorrelated with one another, so they can be interpreted as showing areas with different patterns of plant growth vigour over time. Thresholding will be used to segregate the riparian vegetation from other land-cover classes. Two approaches – automatic thresholding and image classification – will be applied to define PC1 values distinctive to riparian vegetation. The accuracy of the results will be estimated by comparing classification outputs with the best available ground-truth data of known riparian and non-riparian vegetation throughout the Assessment area, using the kappa and Jaccard coefficients. It is anticipated that some riparian vegetation maps will be available in the Assessment area. Time series Landsat images will be linked to vegetation type; geological, hydrogeological and hydrological data; and available information on mapped vegetation and its typical ecohydrological characteristics. A multivariate classification between these parameters and the NDVI and NDWI layers will be used to classify the wetlands into a range of functional types. Vegetation will be classified on the basis of its likelihood of water dependency type: inflow dependent (surface water), aquifer dependent (groundwater resource that has economic values and may support consumptive water supply) or dependent on other sources of water stored under the surface (perched groundwater, water stored in fractured or weathered zones of bedrock formations, or soil water). 7.4 High-resolution estimates of vegetation water use 7.4.1 INTRODUCTION High–spatial resolution (i.e. 25 m) remote sensing (e.g. Landsat) and gridded meteorological data will be used in a process-based model to estimate actual evapotranspiration (ETa), which is the quantity of water actually removed from the land surface by evaporation and transpiration (Pidwirny, 2006). The output of high–spatial resolution ETa estimates will be used to address ecohydrological questions related to water use by GDEs and their sensitivity to changes in water availability associated with development activities. This task will work closely with the groundwater hydrology activity (Chapter 6). High-resolution data are required because many of the GDE features that need to be assessed are discontinuous and fragmented in the landscape (e.g. monsoon rainforest and riparian vegetation). 7.4.2 METHODS Rates of ETa will be determined during the dry season for key GDEs in areas that could potentially be affected by groundwater pumping. This is likely to be the critical time for which high-resolution estimates of vegetation water use are required. The CSIRO Remote Sensing of ETa algorithm, CRemSET (Guerschman et al., 2009b) will be calibrated and audited using an existing network of ground-based flux towers, maintained by Charles Darwin University, that measure ETa. The CRemSET algorithm combines information about vegetation vigour and environmental water to scale potential evapotranspiration (ETp), which is a measure of the ability of the atmosphere to remove water from the surface by evaporation and transpiration assuming no control on water supply (Pidwirny, 2006) to ETa. CRemSET was identified as the most accurate ETa estimation method in a recent Australia-wide intercomparison of eight ETa algorithms against independent catchment water balance and flux tower measurement evaluation datasets (Glenn et al., 2011). The need for a specific northern Australian calibration of CRemSET will be determined following assessment of the initial results. Recent increases in the number of flux towers in northern Australia will likely increase model accuracy by providing spatially denser calibration data, although these towers are somewhat remote from this catchment. 7.5 Soil water availability 7.5.1 INTRODUCTION Soil water levels are a critical control of plant productivity. This task explores the use of multiple satellite (multisensor) soil water products to provide consistent mapping and monitoring of soil water availability across northern Australia at a higher resolution than has previously been available. This information will be used to inform the land suitability mapping (Chapter 4). Multiple satellite soil water products are considered because they each have particular strengths and weaknesses in mapping soil water across Australia’s varying landscape. These differences make some datasets more sensitive to variations in topography or vegetation cover density than others. In combination, the datasets provide considerably more information than any single product used in isolation. In addition, a multisensor approach increases the spatial completeness and temporal density of the satellite data – which are the only observational source of soil water information, especially in the sparse data environment of remote northern Australia. 7.5.2 METHODS This task will collate, evaluate and calibrate satellite soil water products at approximately 10km spatial resolution across northern Australia. The products include those derived from the passive microwave sensors AMSR2, SMOS and SMAP, and active (radar) microwave sensors, including ASCAT and WindSat. The combination of passive and active sensors is required to provide accurate and high-resolution soil water estimates. The products will be evaluated against in-situ and proximal soil water monitoring stations – namely, the OzFlux and CosmOz networks – before recalibration of the data, so that each product reports soil water in a consistent set of units. A second part of this task will add value to soil water monitoring capability across northern Australia by assimilating the satellite products into a simple water balance model. The proposed model is itself driven by satellite-derived rainfall estimates from the GPM multisatellite precipitation analysis system (IMERG). The integration of data into the model has two benefits: it improves the spatial resolution of the models to 1 km, and it imparts the constraints of the satellite data to the modelled root-zone moisture (approximately the top 1 m of soil), thus making the resulting estimates more suitable for plant water availability assessments. 7.6 References Brando VE and Dekker AG (2003) Satellite hyperspectral remote sensing for estimating estuarine and coastal water quality. IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing 41, 1378– 1387. Brando VE, Dekker AG, Park YJ and Schroeder T (2012) Adaptive semianalytical inversion of ocean color radiometry in optically complex waters. Applied Optics 51, 2808–2833. Canty MJ (2010) Image Analysis, Classification and Change Detection in Remote Sensing, With Algorithms for ENVI/IDL. Taylor & Francis, CRC Press. 441 pp. Canty MJ and Nielsen AA (2006) Visualization and unsupervised classification of changes in multispectral satellite imagery. International journal of remote sensing, 27(18), 3961-3975. Dronova I, Gong P, Wang L and Zhong L. (2015) Mapping dynamic cover types in a large seasonally flooded wetland using extended principal component analysis and object-based classification. Remote Sensing of Environment, 158, 193-206. Glenn EP, Doody TM, Guerschman JP, Huete AR, King EA, McVicar TR, Van Dijk AIJM, Van Niel TG, Yebra M and Zhang YQ (2011) Actual evapotranspiration estimation by ground and remote sensing methods: the Australian experience. Hydrological Processes. 25(26), 4103–4116. Guerschman JP, Sims NC, Warren G, Arthur T and Colloff M (2009a) Remote sensing of inundation. In: Overton IC, Colloff MJ, Doody TM, Henderson B and Cuddy SM (eds) Ecological outcomes of flow regimes in the Murray–Darling Basin. A report prepared for the National Water Commission by CSIRO Water for a Healthy Country Flagship. CSIRO, Canberra, 422. Guerschman J.P., Van Dijk A.I.J.M., Mattersdorf G., Beringer J., Hutley L., Leuning R., Pipunic R. and Sherman B., (2009b) Scaling of potential evapotranspiration with MODIS data reproduces flux observations and catchment water balance observations across Australia. Journal of Hydrology, 369 (1-2), 107-119. Li F, Jupp DL, Reddy S, Lymburner L, Meueller N, Tan P and Islam A (2010) An evaluation of the use of atmospheric and BRDF correction to standardize Landsat data. IEE Journal of Selected Topics in Applied Earth observations and Remote Sensing 3, 257–270. Neeti N and Eastman JR (2014) Novel approaches in Extended Principal Component Analysis to compare spatio-temporal patterns among multiple image time series. Remote Sensing of Environment, 148, 84-96. Pidwirny M (2006) Actual and Potential Evapotranspiration. Fundamentals of Physical Geography, 2nd Edition. Viewed 20 May 2016. http://www.physicalgeography.net/fundamentals/8j.html. Sims NC, Warren G, Overton IC, Austin J, Gallant J, King D, Merrin LE, Donohue R, McVicar TR, Hodgen MJ, Penton DJ, Chen Y, Huang C, Cuddy SM (2014) RiM-FIM floodplain inundation modelling for the Edward-Wakool, Lower Murrumbidgee and Lower Darling River systems. Report prepared for the Murray–Darling Basin Authority. Water for a Healthy Country Flagship, CSIRO: Canberra. https://publications.csiro.au/rpr/pub?pid=csiro:EP143823. Waltham N, Burrows D, Butler B, Wallace J, Thomas C, James C and Brodie J (2013) Waterhole ecology in the Flinders and Gilbert catchments. A technical report to the Australian Government from the CSIRO Flinders and Gilbert Agricultural Resource Assessment, part of the North Queensland Irrigated Agriculture Strategy. CSIRO Water for a Healthy Country and Sustainable Agriculture flagships, Canberra, Australia. https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Nathan_Waltham/publication/260599789_Waterhole_ecology_in_the_Flinders_and_Gilbert_catchments/links/5405bab30cf2bba34c1d7e38.pdf. Xu H (2006) Modification of normalised difference water index (NDWI) to enhance open water features in remotely sensed imagery. International Journal of Remote Sensing 27, 3025– 3033. Part III Economic viability: What are the opportunities by which water resource development may enable regional development? 8 Agriculture and aquaculture viability 8.1 Agriculture viability 8.1.1 INTRODUCTION This chapter provides an overview of approaches used in recent agricultural assessments in northern Australia. Based on the lessons learned from that work, it then outlines the methods to be used in the agriculture viability activity. The activity requires biophysical agricultural production assessments and economic assessments to be undertaken in a fully integrated way. Agricultural production assessments will also depend heavily on information generated by other Assessment activities on soils, land suitability and water resources. Rather than being prescriptive about cropping systems for particular locations, the aim is to provide insights on the issues and opportunities associated with developing integrated cropping or crop–livestock systems, as opposed to individual crops. The key questions that the agricultural viability sub-activity seeks to address in the Fitzroy catchment include: • What are the potential yields and costs of production for a range of crops and forages, given the soils and climate constraints? • What are the water demands for a range of crops and forages? • What are the opportunities to integrate intensively grown, high-quality forage production into beef systems? • What are the options for cropping systems (double cropping, rotational cropping)? • Can cropping or forage–beef systems provide yields and net returns capable of servicing the capital costs of development? • How important are risk factors such as extreme weather events, pests and diseases, and management constraints for the viability of crops and forages? • What are the opportunities for less intensive forms of cropping and improved forage production – that is, rainfed systems supplemented by some irrigation? • How is future climate likely to affect crop and forage production? • Can crops and forages be grown sustainably in the longer term without negatively impacting on water quality in streams and aquifers? • What are the mitigation measures necessary to manage environmental risks for irrigated agriculture development? 8.1.2 SUMMARY OF PREVIOUS AGRICULTURAL ASSESSMENTS The most recent technical assessment that is highly relevant to the current Assessment is the Flinders and Gilbert Agricultural Resource Assessment (FGARA; Petheram et al., 2013a, b). A largely bottom-up approach was employed in FGARA, whereby crop calendars and crop yields were determined for a range of field and horticultural crops. Crop yields were determined based on crop modelling and expert knowledge, drawing on information from other research activities in FGARA on soils, land suitability, water resources and climate (including climate change scenarios). FGARA included an assessment of both dryland and irrigated crop production, and determined the best time of year for planting of annual crops (Webster et al., 2013). Water demand from crops was calculated; together with information on transmission and storage losses, this helped inform scenarios of sizes of water storages required and capital costs associated with irrigation. Indicative gross margins were then developed for each of the crops. Potential farm profitability of irrigated cropping and irrigated fodder crops for beef production was assessed by taking different scenarios of gross margins (revenue minus variable costs), and combining them with overhead costs and capital costs for a range of irrigation infrastructure options. This provided a good approach for assessing the gross margin needed to achieve profitability under a range of capital infrastructure options for irrigation, rather than introducing the complexity and uncertainty associated with a large range of possibilities for individual crop gross margins. As well as on-farm profitability, the economic analysis included costs and returns at the scheme and regional scales. FGARA also undertook case studies of specific development options within each of the two catchment areas. The case studies took a farming systems approach to examine multiple cropping options and sequences, and implications for region-scale capital costs, such as processing infrastructure (e.g. cotton gin, sugar mill). It is recognised that this case study approach did not (and could not) capture all of the potential system synergies, trade-offs and commercial innovations that may occur – for example, sugar mill providing co-generation for powering a cotton gin and other infrastructure, or use of by-products and crop residues in livestock systems. In addition to the economic work in FGARA, the Mosaic Agriculture project (Grice et al., 2013) undertook economic analysis of different forage crop options as part of diversified beef enterprises. The Northern Australia Food and Fibre Supply Chain project (Ash and Gleeson, 2014) developed a library of gross margins for a wide range of different crops in four different regions across northern Australia (Flinders–Gilbert, Katherine, Ord, Pilbara), which will be used in this Assessment. Associated with this economic analysis, a supply chain model for transport costs was developed that will be of benefit in the Assessment. A broader historical assessment of the successes and challenges of agricultural developments across northern Australia (Ash et al., 2014) will also be used as context in assessing agricultural viability in the Fitzroy catchment. 8.1.3 METHOD OVERVIEW Rather than commencing with the biophysical drivers (such as climate, soils and environment) from which crop, forage and animal production, and financial analyses are generated, it is proposed that the starting point be the returns required to service capital costs of development i.e. a market driven approach. This information will drive an analysis of the type of cropping systems and/or crop–livestock systems that are capable of delivering required returns, given the constraints of soils, environment, climate, and supply and reliability of irrigation resources. The approach will still require significant individual crop and fodder assessment, using modelling, industry best practice and expert knowledge. However, it is envisaged that these assessments can be better targeted than apriori assessing a wide range of crops for yield and gross margins and then discovering that many will never provide the required returns on investment. The logic behind this approach is shown in Figure 8-1. For more information on this figure please contact CSIRO on enquiries@csiro.au Figure 8-1 Proposed market driven approach to agricultural viability and economic assessment In the 2.5 years before completion of the Assessment, a small amount of opportunistic field work is planned to help validate crop models. This will depend on having in place ‘crop-ready’ appropriate land resource and irrigation infrastructure, because it will not be feasible – either in time or in financial resources – to initiate any new areas for testing. Within the Fitzroy catchment, there are trials and commercial forage crops being grown (Mowanjum Aboriginal Corporation, pastoral stations) and the Assessment will be able to access data from these trials and commercial crops. For field and horticultural crops this reason it may be necessary to undertake field trials or it will be necessary to draw on data collected by the Department of Agriculture and Food Western Australia (DAFWA) from nearby but outside the Fitzroy catchment (e.g. La Grange Basin near Broome). 8.1.4 REQUIRED RETURNS ON INVESTMENT Examining required returns on investment will involve initially assessing the likely costs of development – that is, for land, land preparation, capital costs of irrigation storages (where appropriate), equipment, and legal and regulatory costs. From this, it will be possible to determine the gross margins (gross returns less variable costs) needed to provide an acceptable return on investment, with a deliberate effort made to factor in risks such as failed crops associated with extreme weather events, pests or diseases. These disruptions cannot be explicitly predicted so scenarios with assumptions based on crop failures in 2-3 years in ten will be used. A key driver of profitability of agricultural development in northern Australia relates to transport and supply chains. This task will therefore examine sensitivity to different supply chain options (see Chapter 10), using the supply chain modelling approach developed in the Northern Australia Food and Fibre Supply Chain study (Ash and Gleeson, 2014). The approach will be iterative because the costs of development will only become clear as data are provided from other Assessment analyses on water resource development options (i.e. groundwater and surface water storages). It is anticipated that, in addition to in-house CSIRO expertise in economics, the Assessment will draw on expertise from business consultants experienced in agricultural developments in northern Australia. 8.1.5 FARM- AND PADDOCK-SCALE ECONOMICS Recently completed projects such as FGARA and the Northern Australia Food and Fibre Supply Chain study have generated a substantial ‘library’ of crop and forage gross margins, which can be used to generate indicative gross margins that will feed into the economic analyses. A combination of development costs and gross margins will be used to determine farm-scale and scheme-scale profitability under a range of scenarios of price, yield, supply chain costs, and costs of development; this will incorporate risk factors such as extreme weather events and outbreaks of pests or diseases (Table 8-1). Yield variability will be generated from crop analyses and price variability will be based on historical movements and the Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics and Sciences (ABARES) mid-term projection, released as part of their quarterly Agricultural Commodity updates (ABARES, 2016). Table 8-1 Summary of the economic analytical approach proposed for different scales (paddock, farm, and irrigation scheme) ANALYSIS WHY INFORMATION NEEDS Enterprise gross margins (paddock- scale) analysis Asks if there are viable enterprises to accompany irrigation development • List of prospective crops, prices and input costs tailored to geographic context (including transport costs) • Modification of gross margin budgets Farm-scale profitability analysis Asks if an on-farm irrigation development is viable after considering all fixed and variable costs of the investment. Variations: • What is the most that could be invested in infrastructure based on known gross margins? • What is the minimum gross margin that would be needed to break even on a known investment cost? • Costs of development (e.g. irrigation and storage infrastructure) • Gross margins • Review estimates from other projects Scheme-scale profitability analysis* Asks if the costs of providing scheme-scale infrastructure can be exceeded by returns from a regional development • Specification of scheme-scale development – e.g. cost of infrastructure, what area is suitable * Scheme-scale economic analysis is described in the socio-economics chapter (Chapter 10). 8.1.6 CROP, FORAGE AND LIVESTOCK ANALYSES Literature review A literature review will be the first step in selecting possibilities for crops and cropping systems, because interest in the agricultural potential of the Assessment area has a long history. Two processes will be used: • Past publications and personal experiences will be sought and reviewed, covering cropping and livestock experience (either actual (trial, commercial) or desktop). This will include the full hierarchy from single-enterprise biophysical studies to bigger-picture agro-economic studies. • Available information will be interpreted and analysed – for example, on optimal climate–crop combinations, soil suitability, available market windows (especially counter-seasonal supply options), infrastructure constraints and opportunities, and human capital issues. The literature review will capture existing agricultural research work in northern Australia to inform the assessment of productivity and water use of irrigated crops and forages. Crop and forage modelling and analysis The cropping systems analysis will be dependent on having estimates of crop, forage and livestock production for individual components of the system. The range of potential crops and forages will be beyond the scope of highly parameterised simulation models such as the Agricultural Production Systems Simulator (APSIM), so a pluralistic approach will be adopted, using simulation models, industry data, best practice and expert knowledge. For the Fitzroy catchment, the DAFWA has requested that the Assessment concentrate on crops put forward in the market development work undertaken by Coriolis (DAFWA, 2015). These crops include sunflowers, sugarcane, sorghum, cassava, sesame, soybeans, cotton, lentils, beans and peanuts. In addition, the current interests in irrigated agriculture in the Fitzroy catchment are closely associated with beef systems, so there will also be some emphasis on forage crops. For the forage–beef component, the Assessment will work closely with the Western Australian Department of Water, which is actively involved in development of Mowanjum irrigated forage initiative, and with DAFWA which is assessing different forage cultivars for production, quality and weediness as part of the Northern Beef Futures project. Crop calendars will be developed for each of the crops and forage crops assessed. It should be noted that crop modelling will be undertaken with existing varieties. As regions are developed it will become important to develop varieties adapted to the local environment. This will take many years and is outside the scope of this Assessment. APSIM APSIM is a modelling framework that has been developed to simulate biophysical process in farming systems – in particular, where there is interest in the economic and ecological outcomes of management practice in the face of climate risk (Holzworth et al., 2015). The APSIM modelling framework has been used for a broad range of applications, including on-farm decision making, seasonal climate forecasting, risk assessment for government policy making (Keating et al., 2003), and assessment of the impact of changes in cropping systems and agronomic practices on the water balance of dryland regions (Verburg et al., 2003). It has demonstrated utility in predicting performance of commercial crops, provided that soil properties are well characterised (Carberry et al., 2009). Validated crop models have been used in previous assessments of cropping potential for a range of prospective crops in northern Australia (Carberry et al., 1991; Yeates, 2001; Pearson and Langridge, 2008; Webster et al., 2013; Ash and Gleeson, 2014). The APSIM simulation framework comprises several modules: biological modules that simulate biophysical farming processes, management modules that define ‘management rules’ that characterise a simulated scenario (e.g. crop, sowing date, application of irrigation and nitrogen fertiliser), environmental modules that command the rate at which biological modules operate (maximum and minimum temperature, rainfall, solar radiation), program management modules to facilitate data flow within the simulations and produce outputs (e.g. grain yield, biomass, irrigation requirement, water use efficiency, nitrogen use efficiency), and a central ‘simulation engine’ that drives the processes and passes messages between independent modules. The soil remains central to the farming system, with modules specifying individual crops or management actions ‘plugged in’ or ‘pulled out’, depending on a specific simulation’s requirements. The key inputs required by APSIM are long-term daily climate records, characterised soils describing plant available water capacity, and agronomic practice for managing irrigation and crop agronomy. Crops currently available in APSIM and important to the Assessment are shown in Table 8-2. Although the focus of this work will be on irrigated crop and forage production, it will also be important to examine opportunistic dryland farming options, as well as dryland farming supplemented by small amounts of irrigation. Table 8-2 Land use category and crop/forage modules currently available in APSIM that can be used in this Assessment Crops/forages with asterisk have been validated for the tropics of Australia. LAND USE CROP Cereal crop Maize* Rice* Sorghum (grain)* Food legume Mungbean Soybean Forage grass, hay, silage Bambatsi Rhodes grass Maize Millet (forage) Sorghum (forage) Forage legumes Lablab Cowpea Lucerne Industrial crop Cotton Sugarcane Root crop Peanuts Model characterisation for some of the important crops and forages for northern Australia identified in FGARA could be improved during this Assessment. Field work may be required to collect the required data (such as phenology responses). Where possible, these data will be collected in collaboration with existing field work programs of the local agencies. The North Australian Beef Systems Analyser (NABSA) The North Australian Beef Systems Analyser (NABSA) is a crop–forage–livestock model, which will be used to explore the opportunities for irrigated forages and crops to lift productivity in the beef sector and to provide different market opportunities beyond live export. NABSA is a whole-farm-scale dynamic simulation model that mimics the response over time of a beef cattle enterprise with a specified herd structure of age and sex classes (Ash et al., 2015). It integrates livestock, pasture and forage crop production with labour and land resource requirements and availability; accounts for component revenue and cost streams; and provides estimates of the expected environmental consequences (land condition, soil erosion) of various management options. The responses thus include production, economic and environmental dimensions, which are generated as output for each year of a simulation trial and as averages for the trial. The model allows the user to define the type and size of beef enterprise (e.g. breeding, finishing), and initial age and sex class structure of the beef herd that are relevant to the biophysical features of the catchment that is being simulated. Other input parameters associated with the herd operations include labour supply and demand, direct husbandry and marketing costs (e.g. costs of transport, veterinary, fuel, supplementary feeding), overhead costs, prices per kilogram of liveweight for different animal turn-off classes, and rules for sale of animals, and for feeding and disposal of animals when forage becomes limiting. Forage availability is tracked using 12-monthly forage pools. Forage production is imported at each monthly time step from external sources: the pasture production model GRASP (McKeon et al., 2000) and the fodder/crop model APSIM (Keating et al., 2003). Simulation of animal growth from birth to turn-off age is based on the available energy and protein supplied by forages and feed supplements, using standard relationships for the nutrient requirements of domesticated ruminants (CSIRO, 2007). In terms of animal reproduction, conception is determined by the weight of cows relative to a reference weight (the expected weight of an animal in good condition at a given age), which is an effective surrogate for body condition score. The model simulates key resource condition outcomes for modelled scenarios, and changes in land condition influence future forage production. Soil erosion is also simulated. Total gross margin (revenue from sales minus direct production and marketing costs) and annual net economic profits (total gross margin minus overhead costs) are generated based on livestock sales revenue, and enterprise variable and overhead costs, including labour costs and interest paid on outstanding debts. General capital costs (e.g. depreciation and opportunity costs of capital held in livestock, infrastructure and land) are not included, but the capital cost for specific development scenarios (e.g. establishing a pasture, specialised animal handling infrastructure) can be included. It is clear there are opportunities in the Fitzroy catchment for growing irrigated forage that can be incorporated into alternative finishing systems to that of young live export of animals with a weight of 300-350 kg. The NABSA model allows exploration of different market pathways. Crop and forages that cannot be modelled A number of irrigated agricultural systems may be of interest in the catchments that APSIM does not have the capacity to simulate – for example some cucurbits, tree crops such as sandalwood, and some fodder or pastures. For these crops, expert and local experience from northern Australia will be used to help develop an assessment of production potential and water use. For some of these cropping systems, simple day degree models exist that have been designed to estimate harvest date and potential yield. These simple models will be compared with available data in each catchment to determine their utility. Where existing cropping systems operate in northern Australia – for example, mango, melon and vegetable industries – production and water use data will be collected from these existing farming systems to inform the Assessment. Climate change and crop, forage and livestock production It is possible to incorporate climate change projections (Chapter 3) in APSIM and NABSA to assess climate change impacts and potential effectiveness of adaptation options. This will be undertaken for a few key crops and forages to illustrate the production risks and opportunities associated with climate change. Given the projections are well into the future, economic analysis of climate change will not be assessed in this Assessment. Representing uncertainty Economic outcomes will depend on a range of variables; climate uncertainty now and into the future, yields, pests and diseases, debt, prices, variable costs such as transport and market access. In the scope of the Assessment it is impossible to adequately represent all of these variables and their interactions. However, uncertainty will be examined in a few key variables such as; climate and its impact on yields as represented in probabilistic outcomes from the APSIM model, price and transport variability and its effect on gross margins, and capital costs. Dependencies on other activities in the Assessment The crop, forage and livestock assessments, especially for simulation modelling, will depend on data and outputs from the climate (Chapter 3), land suitability (Chapter 4), water storage activities (Chapter 9) and socio-economics (Chapter 10). Initial estimates of production will be based on generic soils selected to match as closely as possible existing soils information in the target regions, but these will be adjusted as new information becomes available. The modelling work should also provide estimates of water used for different crops and forages. Ultimately, this will link to water requirements for cropping systems, with feedback to water resource requirements, availability and reliability in terms of water storage. As stated through this chapter, the agricultural viability activity will link closely to the work on economics (Chapter 10) to integrate methods and results. Losses of water from irrigation land may impacts on water quality in streams and aquifers. It will be important to link with the ecology activity (Chapter 12) and the groundwater activity (Chapter 6) to assess possible off-site impacts. Irrigated agriculture may also have an effect on Indigenous water values (Chapter 11), which will need to be considered. Fieldwork Limited field studies will be undertaken to assist in validating crop and forage models, and estimates of crop and forage production. The field work will be largely opportunistic and tailored to each catchment, drawing on existing areas where it will be possible to use irrigation. In the Fitzroy catchment, there are opportunities to use data on forage crops and animal production that are being collected outside the Assessment area at the Mowanjum and Le Grange irrigation development. Cropping development is also under way at Gogo Station, and there may be an opportunity to work with Gogo to collect some crop production data. 8.1.7 CROPPING SYSTEMS AND CROP–FORAGE–LIVESTOCK SYSTEMS This task will focus on analysing the type of cropping systems and crop–forage–livestock systems that are capable of delivering required returns, given the constraints of soils, environment, climate, and supply and reliability of water for irrigation. The aim is not to be prescriptive about cropping systems for particular locations, but rather to provide insights on the issues and opportunities associated with developing integrated cropping or crop–livestock systems, as opposed to individual crops. The number of different possibilities for crop and crop–forage–livestock systems will be very large, given the range of field crops, horticultural crops, forages, and crop and crop–forage rotations that can be grown in northern Australia. The first stage of this task will be to develop an approach for reducing the range of possibilities into a discrete set of agricultural system typologies that can be integrated with the economic analysis outlined above. Part of this analysis will be the scale needed to justify investment in processing facilities for industrial crops such as cotton or sugarcane. As information on returns required becomes available, testing of the different cropping system typologies will commence. The systems analysis will include a risk assessment of off-site impacts, and in particular, losses of nutrients, sediments and pesticides as a result of intensive crop–forage systems. This assessment will be based on case studies for major crops examining the risks in relation to the interacting factors of climate, soil, landscape location, irrigation type and management practices. 8.2 Aquaculture viability The purpose of the aquaculture viability sub-activity is to assess the viability of irrigated and near- shore land-based aquaculture in the Fitzroy catchment, and examine the opportunities and circumstances under which aquaculture enterprises could complement irrigated cropping and grazing enterprises. There will be a number of species that will be of interest in the catchment. To differentiate from agriculture production, the term “Pond crop” will be used to describe aquaculture production. This section is in three parts. The first part provides a brief background to aquaculture in northern Australia and summarises recent relevant studies. The second part describes the general method for assessment of the suitability of the Fitzroy catchment for different types of aquaculture enterprises. The third part describes tasks that will be undertaken to assess the viability of aquaculture in the Fitzroy catchment. The key questions that the aquaculture sub-activity seeks to address in the Fitzroy catchment include: • What are the opportunities for intensive and extensive farming? • What are the key environmental and regulatory obstacles that will affect aquaculture development? • What are the potential yields and costs of production for a range of crops, given the water, soils and climate? • Can candidate species provide yields and net returns capable of servicing the capital costs of development? • Under what circumstances could irrigated crop waste streams complement aquaculture enterprises? • What are the opportunities to provide nutrient-rich wastewater from freshwater aquaculture to a range of agricultural crops? • How important are risk factors such as extreme weather events on the viability of pond crops? • How is future climate likely to affect pond crop production? • What are the opportunities for Indigenous community engagement? 8.2.1 INTRODUCTION In the past 20 years, aquaculture has been the fastest growing food sector in the world. During this period, Australian aquaculture production has increased by an average of 11% annually (Skirtin et al., 2013) to a production value of $994 million in 2013–14. Culture of temperate water salmonids accounts for 55% of the total value of Australian aquaculture production. The aquaculture production value for Western Australia, Queensland and the Northern Territory combined accounts for less than 25% of the Australian Industry (Savage and Hobshawn, 2015). There is significant untapped potential for the economic and sustainable expansion of aquaculture in northern Australia. Preliminary broad-scale analysis by Mcleod et al. (2002) indicated that 1.2 million hectares of Australia’s northern coastline is potentially suitable for pond-based aquaculture. To date, significant aquaculture development in northern Australia has in part been constrained by complex legislation and the absence of aquaculture-specific policy. The most recent relevant assessment is the Aquaculture futures for coastal northern Australia final report (Preston et al., 2015). The study concluded that there is enormous potential for the development of economically, socially and environmentally sustainable aquaculture enterprises in coastal areas of northern Australia. The focus for the study was large-scale intensive farming of high-value marine species. In Preston et al. (2015), GIS methods developed by Mcleod et al. (2002) were applied to identify optimal biogeographic locations for land-based finfish and crustacean aquaculture in coastal northern Australia. The first step was a coarse preselection using low- resolution data, which are typically cheap, extensive and easily available. The second step involved fine-scale analysis with high-resolution data. A set of refined physical parameters defined by Mcleod et al. (2002) was used to select potential sites. For every land parcel, each parameter was assigned an output (score),and the overall rating of theblockwasafunction of the sum of theparameter outputs.Preliminary site selection focusedon distanceto coast and general landtopography, ignoring soil type and composition. Preston et al. (2015) also undertook a case studywithin the Archer River catchment in northQueensland. The catchment was located in a region identified bybroad-scaleanalysis assuitablefor land-based aquaculture.In close consultationwith theTraditional Owners, sites wereinspected byaerialand on-ground surveysto investigate significant constraints,includingseasonalflooding, infrastructure and transport logistics. The study estimatedeconomicreturns forthe twospecies that offer thebest potential for return on investment:black tigerprawn (Penaeusmonodon) andbarramundi (Latescalcarifer). 8.2.2AQUACULTURE POND SUITABILITY ANALYSIS Pond-based aquaculture development in northern Australia hasthe potential to besuitable forfinfish and crustaceans of marine and freshwaterorigin. For theAssessment, a rule set of limitations will be developed to enable site selectionfor bothmarine andfreshwater species, usingsome of the fine-scaledata that will be produced bythe Assessment (e.g.fine-scalesoil data produced as part of the land suitability activity–Chapter 4). For the purpose of this analysis,each pond type willbetreated as a crop, irrespectiveof the speciesto be cultured in thepond.In theAssessment,fourpond types will be assigned a set of limitations to identify areas suitable formarineand freshwater aquaculture in earthenor plastic-lined ponds (Table8-3). Table8-3Pond types POND TYPEDESCRIPTION EarthenmarineEarth-based pond suitable for marine finfish and crustaceans LinedmarinePlastic-lined pond suitable for marine finfish and crustaceans EarthenfreshwaterEarth-based pond suitable for freshwater finfish and crustaceans LinedfreshwaterPlastic-lined pond suitable for freshwater finfish and crustaceans A series of ruleswill bedeveloped for each pond type,basedon a set ofpotential limitations.Aninitial analysishas identified11potential limitations (Table8-4). Table8-4Limitations identified in preliminary aquaculture pond suitability analysis LIMITATIONRATIONALE Soil pHSoil pHlevels outside tolerance range can be detrimental to animal health andreduce crop production efficiency Soil typeConstruction of earthenponds requireslow-permeability characteristics (e.g.high clay content) Acid sulfate soilsAcid sulfate soils can bedetrimental to animal health and reducecrop production efficiency Soil salinityHigh soil salinitycanbe detrimental to animal health and reducecrop production efficiency SlopeLand slope has a significantbearing on required capitalinvestment to constructponds ElevationLand elevation has significant bearing on ability to drain ponds and crop production efficiency 74|Proposed project methods Distance to marine water Pond distance from marine water source has a large bearing on required capital investment and ongoing crop production efficiency Rainfall High levels of rainfall have potential to significantly reduce source water salinity, which can be detrimental to crop production Flooding Flooding events have potential to significantly reduce source water salinity, which can be detrimental to crop production Cyclone Associated infrastructure damage and power losses can be detrimental to animal health, and reduce crop production efficiency Zoning Current land zoning (including native title) will have a significant bearing on the probability of obtaining aquaculture licence approval LIMITATION RATIONALE 8.2.3 AQUACULTURE VIABILITY ASSESSMENT The aquaculture viability assessment will comprise a series of interrelated tasks, some of which will be undertaken in conjunction with other activities. These are briefly discussed below. Economic analysis An economic analysis of exiting or prospective aquaculture enterprises in the Fitzroy catchment will be undertaken in conjunction with the socio-economics activity (Chapter 10) and, as much as possible, consistent with the approach taken in the agricultural viability analysis (Section 8.1). As with the agricultural viability analysis, the focus of the analysis will be to provide insights on the issues and opportunities associated with developing different marine and freshwater aquaculture operations As with the agricultural analysis, it is proposed that the starting point of the analysis be the returns required to meet investment imperatives. This will involve initially assessing the likely capital costs involved in the development of different aquaculture activities, and the normal return that would be expected to make such an investment viable. The necessary output prices and production levels to achieve this given a range of likely input prices and availability will be assessed. The likelihood of these prices and/or production levels being achieved will be examined based on existing market information. Similarly, the potential available of suitable inputs to achieve the required output levels will also be assessed. To achieve this, the approach will still require significant individual aquaculture business assessments, using modelling and expert knowledge. Detailed production models for a range of different aquaculture businesses have been developed by the Queensland Government (https://publications.qld.gov.au/dataset/agbiz-tools-fisheries-aquaculture) which can underpin these analysis. Information on capital costs and input prices are limited, so the use of expert knowledge and local industry experience will be particularly important. The logic behind this approach is shown in Figure 8-2. For more information on this figure please contact CSIRO on enquiries@csiro.au Figure 8-2 Simplified schematic of the proposed top-down approach to aquaculture viability and economic assessment Exploring Indigenous and community stakeholder perspectives Interviews conducted as part of the socio-economics activity (Chapter 10) will scope key issues for local and community stakeholders with respect to water resource development, including aquaculture development. Stakeholders include potential smaller-scale investors in new enterprises, and stakeholders from the wider community who are interested in existing goods and services provided by the natural resource base that may be affected by aquaculture development. Further information on Indigenous perspectives of aquaculture will be derived from the Indigenous aspirations and values activity (Chapter 11). Collectively, this analysis will assist in understanding and overcoming barriers: . the enablers of, and barriers to, local and Indigenous participation in aquaculture development, such as – knowledge and skills – compatibility with existing business operations – social and cultural issues . key issues for community stakeholders in wider social licence-to-operate for aquaculture development, such as – planning and governance requirements – perceptions of impacts – distribution of benefits – sustainability of the opportunity. Risk analysis Water temperature is the most critical influence on aquaculture production duration, from pond to plate. Warm-water aquaculture species generally have a broad thermal tolerance, although optimal production occurs within a narrow bandwidth of this range. A report by Hobday et al. (2008) suggested that a rise in seawater temperature in northern Australia is likely to increase the area of suitable land and improve production efficiency of prawn aquaculture. In coastal areas water salinity typically ranges from 37 ppt in oceanic waters to less than 1 ppt in fresh water in the upper catchment. The water salinity of a catchment is likely to vary widely, depending on location, tidal flow, rainfall and freshwater runoff. In aquaculture, the capacity for a species to osmoregulate (maintain internal salt concentrations) has a large bearing on its suitability for culture in a specific location. Euryhaline species such as barramundi have a broad salinity tolerance and are able to thrive in locations affected by variable salinity. The majority of established species such as freshwater crayfish and, to a lesser extent, marine prawns have a narrow salinity tolerance range for optimal production. Policy and legislation Northern Australia has the potential to support diverse economic activity. However, some of the rules governing land use and effluent discharge, for example, are likely to constrain aquaculture development in the catchment. Together with legal support provided by the socio-economics activity (Chapter 10), a review of current land arrangements (such as native title) and aquaculture- related policy will seek to identify development constraints in each jurisdiction. 8.3 References ABARES (2016) Agricultural commodities: March quarter 2016 CC BY 3.0. Ash A (2014) Factors driving the viability of major cropping investments in northern Australia – an historical analysis. Northern Australia: food and fibre supply chain synthesis study: Appendix 3. CSIRO and Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics and Sciences, Canberra/ABARES, Australia. Ash A and Gleeson T (2014) Northern Australia: food and fibre supply chain synthesis study. CSIRO and Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics and Sciences, Canberra. Ash A, Hunt L, McDonald C, Scanlan J, Bell L, Cowley R, Watson I, McIvor J and MacLeod N (2015) Boosting the productivity and profitability of northern Australian beef enterprises: exploring innovation options using simulation modelling and systems analysis. Agricultural Systems 139, 50–65. Carberry PS, Cogle AL and McCown RL (1991) Future prospects for cropping in the semi-arid tropics of north Queensland. Land Management Research, CSIRO Division of Tropical Crops and Pastures, St Lucia, Queensland. Carberry PS, Hochman Z, Hunt JR, Dalgleish NP, McCown RL, Whish JPM, Robertson MJ, Foale MA, Poulton PL and Van Rees H (2009) Re-inventing model-based decision support with Australian dryland farmers. 3. Relevance of APSIM to commercial crops. Crop & Pasture Science 60, 1044–1056. CSIRO (2007) Nutrient requirements of domesticated ruminants. Primary Industries Standing Committee on Agriculture, CSIRO Publishing, Melbourne. DAFWA (2015) Growing the north: market opportunities for irrigated agricultural produce from northern Western Australia. A report prepared by Coriolis for the Department of Agriculture and Food, Western Australia. Grice AC, Watson I and Stone P (2013) Mosaic irrigation for the northern Australian beef industry. An assessment of sustainability and potential. Synthesis report. A report prepared for the Office of Northern Australia, Brisbane. Hobday, A. J., E. S. Poloczanska, and R. J. Matear (eds) (2008) Implications of Climate Change for Australian Fisheries and Aquaculture: a preliminary assessment. Report to the Department of Climate Change, Canberra, Australia. August 2008. Holzworth D, Huth N, deVoil P, Zurcher E, Herrman N, McClean G, Chenu K, van Oosterom E, Snow V, Murphy C, Moore A, Brown H, Whish J, Verrall S, Fainges J, Bell L, Peake A, Poulton P, Hochman Z, Thorburn P, Gaydon D, Dalgliesh N, Rodriguez D, Cox H, Chapman S, Doherty A, Teixeira E, Sharp J, Cichota R, Vogeler I, Li F, Wang E, Hammer G, Robertson M, Dimes J, Whitbread A, Hunt J, van Rees H, McClelland T, Carberry P, Hargreaves J, MacLeod N, McDonald C, Harsdorf J, Wedgwood S and Keating, B (2014) APSIM — evolution towards a new generation of agricultural systems simulation. Environmental Modelling & Software 62, 327-350. Keating BA, Carberry PS, Hammer GL, Probert ME, Robertson MJ, Holzworth D, Huth NI, Hargreaves JNG, Meinke H, Hochman Z, McLean G, Verburg K, Snow V, Dimes JP, Silburn M, Wang E, Brown S, Bristow KL, Asseng S, Chapman S, McCown RL, Freebairn DM and Smith CJ (2003) An overview of APSIM, a model designed for farming systems simulation. European Journal of Agronomy 18, 267–288. McKeon G, Ash A, Hall W and Stafford Smith M (2000) Simulation of grazing strategies for beef production in north-east Queensland. In: Hammer GL, Nicholls N and Mitchell C (eds) Applications of seasonal climate forecasting in agricultural and natural ecosystems. Kluwer Academic Publishers, The Netherlands, 227–252. Mcleod I, Pantus F and Preston N (2002) The use of geographical information system for land- based aquaculture planning. Aquaculture Research 33, 241–250. Pearson L and Langridge J (2008) Climate change vulnerability assessment: review of agricultural productivity. CSIRO Climate Adaptation Flagship Working paper no. 1. Petheram C, Watson I and Stone P (eds) (2013a) Agricultural resource assessment for the Flinders catchment. A report to the Australian Government from the CSIRO Flinders and Gilbert Agricultural Resource Assessment, part of the North Queensland Irrigated Agriculture Strategy. CSIRO Water for a Healthy Country and Sustainable Agriculture flagships, Australia. Petheram C, Watson I and Stone P (eds) (2013b) Agricultural resource assessment for the Gilbert catchment. A report to the Australian Government from the CSIRO Flinders and Gilbert Agricultural Resource Assessment, part of the North Queensland Irrigated Agriculture Strategy. CSIRO Water for a Healthy Country and Sustainable Agriculture flagships, Australia. Preston N, Chalmers I, Moore A, Zurcher E, Verrall S, Gaydon D, Coman G, and Arnold S (2015) Sustainable Development of Northern Australia. Aquaculture futures for coastal Northern Australia Final Report December 2015. CSIRO Agriculture. Savage J and Hobshawn P (2015) Australian fisheries and aquaculture statistics 2014. FRDC project 2014/245. Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics and Sciences, Canberra. Skirtin M, Sahlqvist P and Vieira S (2013) Australian fisheries statistics 2012. FRDC project 2010/208. Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics and Sciences, Canberra. Verburg K, Bond WJ and Smith CJ (2003) Use of APSIM to simulate water balances of dryland farming systems in south eastern Australia. CSIRO Land and Water, Canberra. Webster T, Poulton P, Yeates SJ, Cocks B, Hornbuckle J, Gentle J, Brennan McKellar L, Mayberry D, Jones D and Wixon A (2013) Agricultural productivity in the Flinders and Gilbert catchments. A technical report to the Australian Government from the CSIRO Flinders and Gilbert Agricultural Resource Assessment, part of the North Queensland Irrigated Agriculture Strategy. CSIRO Water for a Healthy Country and Sustainable Agriculture flagships, Australia. Yeates SJ (2001) Cotton research and development issues in northern Australia: a review and scoping study. Australian Cotton Cooperative Research Centre, Darwin. 9 Water storage The purpose of the water storage activity is to provide an overview of the different water storage options in the Fitzroy catchment, to enable decision makers to take a long-term view of water resource development and to inform future allocation decisions. Large instream dams are not in scope of the Fitzroy Water Resource Assessment and readers are referred to past studies. In this chapter, methods are described by which different water storage options will be assessed in the Fitzroy catchment. The key questions that this activity seeks to address in the Fitzroy catchment include: • What is the opportunity for storing water in offstream farm-scale water storages, such as ring tanks? • Where are the best opportunities for capturing water from flood channels in the Fitzroy catchment? • What are the costs and considerations associated with water storage and re-regulating structures (e.g. weirs)? • How much water is stored in naturally occurring wetlands and waterholes? • Are there economically viable opportunities for managed aquifer recharge in the Fitzroy catchment? This chapter is in three parts. The first part examines opportunities for farm-scale water storage structures (i.e. <10 GL), such as hillside dams and ring tanks. The second part describes methods for assessing the opportunity to use water from natural wetlands and waterholes, and the third part examines the opportunities for managed aquifer recharge (MAR) in the form of subsurface dams and infiltration-based MAR. 9.1 Introduction In a highly seasonal climate such as the Fitzroy catchment, and in those areas where there is an absence of a suitable groundwater resource, industries that require year-round use of water will need to invest in water storage infrastructure. Before investigating potential water storage options in the Fitzroy catchment, it is instructive to assess the existing storages. 9.1.1 EXISTING MAJOR STORAGES Current surface water allocations in the Fitzroy catchment are low – 15 GL, or less than 1% of the median annual flow. In the Fitzroy catchment, there is limited opportunity to use water from existing water storages. The only surface water storage structure is a small barrage (Camballin barrage) on the Fitzroy River. 9.2Farm-scale hillsidedamsandoffstream storages This section describesmethods for assessing the opportunities for farm-scale instream andoffstream water storagestructures (i.e.<10GL). Instream storages include gully dams andhillsidedams, while offstream water storage facilities can takethe form of ringtanks, turkeynest tanksand excavated tanks (described in moredetail inTable9-1). Weirs can be used in conjunction withsome offstream water storages, where the weir is used toraisethe upstream water level to allowdiversion intoan offstream storage or the creation of apumping pool. The most suitable type of farm-scale water storage depends on a number of factors, including topography,the availability of suitable soils, excavation costs and thesource ofwater (e.g.groundwater or surface water pumping, flood harvesting). Table9-1Types of offstream water storages (Lewis, 2002) TYPE OF FARM SCALESTORAGEDESCRIPTIONSTORAGE TO EXCAVATIONRATIO Gully damAn earth embankmentbuilt across a drainage line. Dams are normally built from material located inthestorage area upstream of the storagesite10:1 (favourable conditions) Hillside damAn earth dam located on a hillside or slope,and not in a defined depression or drainage line5:1 (on flatter terrain) 1:1 (on steeper slopes) RingtankA storage confined entirely within a continuousembankmentbuiltfrom material obtained within the storage basin1.5:1 (small tank) 4.5:1 (large tank) Turkey nest tankA storage confined entirely within a continuousembankmentbutbuilt from material borrowed from outside the storage area. All water is therefore held above ground levelUsually smaller than ringtanks,and lower storage toexcavation ratioExcavated tankRestrictedto flat sites and comprise excavations below the naturalsurface. Excavated material is wasted. Generally limited to stockand domestic use,and irrigation of high-value cropsLow storage to excavationratio Thefollowing analysis will be undertaken to assess the opportunities forfarm-scale water storagesin theFitzroy catchment: •The soil attribute grids (to a depth of 1.5 m) generated aspart of thelandsuitability activity and locally specific ruleswill be used to identifythose parts of the Assessment area that are moreand less suitable forfarm-scale water storages.The Assessment will draw on borelithology logs, expert and local knowledge, and airborne electromagnetic datato make assessments below 1.5m. •The DamSitemodelwill be usedto identifythose parts of the Assessment area that are likely tobehydrologicallyand topographically favourable forsmall-scale hillsidefarm dams.The DamSitemodel (Readet al., 2012; Petheram et al.,2013) uses a digital elevation model to assess all locations on a river network and test simulatedstoragewalls of varying heights,toproduce a comprehensivedatasetof sites with relevant attributes,including catchment area, runoff, reservoir volume, reservoir surface area,storageheight,storagewidth andstorageface area. Saddle dams are included in the assessment if requiredby theterrain. Thedataset will includean exhaustive set of more than 100,000 potentialstoragelocationsin each catchment (based on previous experience with DamSite). These sites are then filtered to identifyapproximately5000 Water storage|81 of the most suitable sites, using a combination of criteria, including yield, construction cost, and yield per dollar construction cost. Construction cost is calculated using a cost algorithm that penalises higher and longer storage walls. • Likely physical constraints to water pumping in key river reaches (i.e. minimum pumping thresholds) will be estimated. • Spatial analysis, remotely sensed imagery and local engineering expertise will be used to identify those parts of the landscape that are likely to be more suitable for diversion structures. • Over those sections of river reach where there are opportunities to impound water running down flood-outs, a higher-resolution digital elevation model (DEM) will be obtained using laser altimetery or photogrammetry flown by helicopter; the reliability with which the flood-outs run will be estimated using a one-dimensional hydraulic model. Acquisition of higher-resolution DEM cross-sections will primarily occur in those areas identified by the interim land suitability maps as having large continuous areas of land suitable for irrigated agriculture. In assessing region-scale economics of water harvesting schemes, local variations in scale and site- specific nuances can present challenges. These can result in considerably different construction and ongoing operational costs from one site to another (e.g. costs for different amounts of diesel required for pumping, removal of sediment deposited in diversion channels, replacement of worn and damaged equipment). Hence, operationally, each site would require its own specifically tailored engineering design. As a result, the Assessment will not produce individual engineering designs for water harvesting infrastructure for each landholder in the Assessment area; this is beyond the scope and resources of the Assessment. Besides, most landholders will have observed the way in which water moves across their land and will have given considerable thought to their most suitable water harvesting configurations. However, the Assessment will provide some overarching principles that could be used by individual landholders in designing, siting and costing water harvesting infrastructure in the Fitzroy catchment, as well as a relevant list of references on farm storage planning, construction and maintenance. 9.3 Quantifying the volume of natural wetlands and waterholes The possibility of using wetlands to supply water for irrigation while maintaining their ecological functioning has been the focus of research in southern Australia in recent years (Ning et al., 2012; Watkins et al., 2012, Sammond et al., 2012), and the ecological aspects are being investigated as part of the CSIRO project exploring the multiple use of wetlands in northern Australia (Table 1-2). This section describes methods to measure and estimate the storage volume of natural wetlands and waterholes. These include permanent pools in rivers and small water bodies outside of river channels that persist through the dry season. Ecological assessments of whether and how wetlands in northern Australia could be used for multiple purposes will not be included in the Assessment, but will be investigated as part of a companion CSIRO project on the multiple use of wetlands in northern Australia. The total storage volume in natural surface water storages will be estimated by mapping the extent of surface water bodies in the catchment and applying a model relating stored water volume to the surface geometry. The extent will be derived from Geoscience Australia’s Water Observations from Space (WOfS) data, which are based on the Landsat time series archive. These data support the detection and measurement of water bodies larger than about 50 m × 50 m. A model linking water volume to surface geometry will be developed using measured bathymetry in a variety of small water bodies throughout the catchment. The model will include regional variables such as topographic relief and geology to capture regional differences in the relationship between surface shape and water volume. The actual storage volumes of a number of representative wetlands and waterholes will be measured using a sonar depth sounder mounted on an electrically powered radio-controlled boat. Using a remotely operated boat avoids the hazards of operating manned watercraft in waters where crocodiles may be present, and reduces the logistical difficulty of accessing water bodies and operating in shallow waters. The sonar measurements will be collected using a commercial sonar that records measured depths and GPS position. The equipment will have the capacity to measure depths of less than 0.5 m to greater than 50 m and will collect data at rates of 2 to 8 ha per hour of operation. 9.4 Managed aquifer recharge 9.4.1 INTRODUCTION Managed aquifer recharge (MAR) is the intentional recharge of water to aquifers for subsequent recovery for economic productivity and environmental benefit (NRMMC-EPHC-NHMRC, 2009). Where suitable aquifers are present, MAR or subsurface storage offers the advantage of reducing evaporative losses (Hostetler, 2007) and the capital costs associated with dams. Aquifers can be recharged using a variety of techniques, such as by infiltration of water through permeable sediments beneath a dam, river or basin; via injection wells into deeper confined aquifers; or using impermeable barriers to create underground dams or sand dams (Figure 9-1). Terrain and hydrogeology determine the most efficient form of MAR in an area, and will influence the economic viability of the scheme (e.g. infiltration schemes are generally lower cost than injection techniques). MAR can contribute to planned conjunctive use, whereby excess surface water can be stored in an aquifer, for subsequent use when the surface water resource is unavailable (Evans et al., 2013; Lennon et al., 2014). It can also be used to manage potential risks of groundwater resource development, such as creating a hydraulic barrier to prevent seawater intrusion, or providing protection to riparian vegetation and groundwater-dependent ecosystems (Ishida et al., 2011). Importantly, dams and aquifers can be used in combination where shallow surface dams can detain water, allowing greater time for infiltration to occur, or release water to infiltrate into the river bed downstream of the dam wall (e.g. Opthmalia Dam in Western Australia, Little Para Reservoir in South Australia) (Dillon, 2016). A number of infiltration techniques may be suitable for use in northern Australia to support increased economic productivity such as agriculture (Figure 9-1): • Underground dams: a trench constructed and filled with low-permeability material across a streambed in an ephemeral stream, where flow is constricted by a basement high to retain flood flow and allow more time for infiltration – for example, in Brazil (UNEP, 1997). This MAR technique has been applied on the Ashburton River at Minderoo in the Pilbara region of Western Australia, using several metres of concrete and steel to construct an ‘upside-down weir’ and underground dam (Schwartz, 2015). More broadly, use of a mixed-in-place slurry-wall method since the 1990s has allowed the size of subsurface dams to increase, with storage of up to 10 GL in Japan. In southern China, 52 underground dams in karstic limestone store 40 GL, which is used to irrigate an area of 8900 km2 (Ishida et al., 2011). • Percolation tanks and recharge weirs (check dam, gully plug): dams built in ephemeral streams to detain water that infiltrates through the bed, increasing storage in unconfined aquifers – for example, hard rock aquifers in India (Perrin et al., 2010). The Gajwel watershed (85 km2) in Andhra Pradesh uses more than 30 percolation tanks to retain the majority of surface runoff and has more than 600 ha under irrigation. • Infiltration ponds and channels: offstream storages to allow infiltration to an unconfined aquifer. Infiltration basins in the Burdekin Delta (Queensland) recharge up to 45 GL/year to support irrigated agriculture. This scheme provides a water resource, mitigates seawater intrusion and is Australia’s oldest MAR scheme – it has been in operation since 1965 (Dillon et al., 2009). Water is reliably supplied by the Burdekin Falls Dam. • Sand dams: built in ephemeral streams on low-permeability lithology to trap sediment and create a raised aquifer – for example, in Kenya (Ishida et al., 2011). These are typically referred to as sand dams overseas, but the term has a different connotation in Australia; in the Lower Burdekin, it refers to low mounds of sand partially spanning a river, behind which a pumping pool is created. • Recharge releases: dams on ephemeral streams detain that floodwater, which can be used for strategic slow releases downstream to match the infiltration capacity into underlying unconfined aquifers – for example, Little Para River in South Australia (NRMMC-EPHC-NHMRC, 2009; Dillon, 2016). Injection well techniques are higher cost, but may be suited to high-value water uses (e.g. mining, drinking water supply) or to mitigate impacts of groundwater extraction: • Aquifer storage and recovery: well injection and recovery using the same well, which can store water in aquifers of impaired quality (brackish) – for example, South Goulburn Island in the Northern Territory (Knapton, 2002; Page et al., 2010). • Aquifer storage transport and recovery: well injection and recovery from a different well to enhance water treatment – for example, Salisbury (South Australia) with urban stormwater (Page et al., 2010). For more information on this figure please contact CSIRO on enquiries@csiro.au Figure 9-1 Schematic diagram illustrating various techniques that can be used for managed aquifer recharge, depending on the hydrogeological conditions ASR = aquifer storage and recovery; ASTR = aquifer storage transport and recovery Source: NRMMC-EPHC-NHMRC (2009) 9.4.2 METHODS To date, the potential for using MAR to harvest and store wet-season flows of the Fitzroy River for subsequent use in the dry season has been reported to have some merit (Lennon et al., 2014; Harrington and Harrington, 2015), but feasibility has not yet been considered in any detail. Based on porosity and area of the alluvium, Lennon et al. (2014) estimated that up to 5 ML/ha could be stored in the Fitzroy River alluvium. However, the seasonal variability in storage capacity (CSIRO, 2009) and the potential for recharge to discharge directly into the river would need to be assessed (Harrington and Harrington, 2015). There may be opportunity to target MAR investigations to those parts of the Canning Basin aquifers that are in good connection with the Fitzroy River alluvium. Elsewhere, more expensive well injection techniques may be required to enhance recharge. Important considerations for well injection techniques are strategies to manage operational constraints, such as the potential for physical clogging caused by particulates in surface water or chemical clogging caused by geochemical reactions (NRMMC-EPHC-NHMRC, 2009). An important role for MAR in the Fitzroy catchment may be in mitigating the hydraulic limitations on the groundwater resource. For example, MAR could be used to establish a hydraulic barrier to prevent seawater intrusion (as evident in the vicinity of the Broome and Derby water supplies, for example) or to sustain groundwater-dependent ecosystems that rely on the current groundwater discharge regime. The opportunities for MAR in the Fitzroy catchment will be investigated in two stages. The first stage involves a region-scale opportunity assessment, which will broadly outline the opportunity for MAR in the Fitzroy catchment. In the second step, a more detailed pre-feasibility analysis will be undertaken at two of the more promising locations for MAR. MAR region-scale opportunity assessment Before evaluating the feasibility of MAR, a conceptual understanding of the hydrogeology is an essential first step in identifying the likely opportunity and understanding which techniques may be best suited to the environment. Initially, an understanding of the hydrogeology and the opportunities for increased groundwater storage will be developed in conjunction with investigations being undertaken by the groundwater hydrology activity (Chapter 6). Evaluation of the potential for injection well techniques in different parts of the Fitzroy catchment will be limited to a broad articulation of the likely opportunities, based on the conceptual understanding of the regional hydrogeology. In reality, the opportunity to use injection well techniques to store water will be highly site dependent, and assessment of this opportunity would require considerable site-based investigation and resources. It is beyond the scope of the Assessment to undertake investigations at this level of detail across the Assessment area. To assess the potential for infiltration-based MAR methods in the Fitzroy catchment, a region- scale suitability framework will be implemented within a GIS environment. The primary focus will be to assess storage potential within bedsands of the Fitzroy catchment. This will include a combination of readily available spatial datasets and targeted field measurements. Table 9-2 outlines parameters that may be included in the region-scale assessment of the suitability of infiltration-based MAR in the Fitzroy catchment. One of the major limitations to infiltration-based MAR is a reduction in infiltration due to clogging. Hydrodynamic modelling will be undertaken to inform the likely range of river geometries and slopes that may lead to clogging of bedsand aquifers; this information could be captured as a series of rules that could be implemented within a GIS framework. Table9-2Parameters likely to be included in aregion-scale assessment of the suitabilityof infiltration-basedmanaged aquifer recharge PARAMETERMETHODCONCEPTUAL RELATIONSHIP Geometryof riverSatellite imageryControls storage volumeSlopeSRTM-HControls storage volume,and potential for scouring and cloggingParticle size distributionOpportunistic field measurements,Controls storage volume (porosity), influences saturatedof bedsandsrelationships with sourcegeology,hydraulic conductivity and waterretentiondistance of travel and othercatchment attributesDepth of bedsandsOpportunistic field measurements,Controls storage volumecatchment terrain attributes such asulti-resolution Valley Bottom Flatness(MrVBF) Groundwater levelsExisting bore dataAdditional storage volume that could be createdGroundwater salinityField measurements, existing boreDetermines whether water can be used and for what datapurposeDepth to regolithTerrestrial Ecosystem ResearchStorage volumeNetwork(TERN) depth to regolithmapping, bore logs, opportunisticfield measurements Soil textureDigital soil mapping of texture in top Informs likely infiltration rates intop 1.5 m. Typically,clay1.5mcontent increases with depth, unless there is an underlying paleochannelHydraulic conductivityEstimation from particle sizeLeast permeable sediments limitinfiltrationratedistribution at depths greater than 1.5m, opportunistic field measurementsClogging particlesRemote sensing of turbidityToinform likelihood of clogging(Chapter7), upstream geology andslopeGeologyGeological mapping dataStructural controls on subsurface storage (e.g. likelihood ofleakage) Proximity to riverGIS spatialanalysisSource of water is required,cost effectiveness of MARReliability of streamflowHydrological modelling (Chapter5)Determines the reliability with which MAR could be filled Rate of rise and fall ofHydrological modelling (Chapter5)Determines need for intermediate storage basinshydrographs Other factors that will be examined include proximity to existing infrastructure,maintenancerequirements and potentialdemand, which could befrom urban, industryor agricultureactivities. Land suitablefor irrigated agriculture or aquaculture (asevaluated bytheland suitability activity) will beused as a surrogatefor potential futuredemand for water. Pre-feasibilityassessment of MAR in theFitzroy catchment In parallel withthe region-scale assessment of infiltration-based MAR detailed in the previoussection,theAssessment willinvestigate theopportunity to examineand monitor theperformanceof an operationalundergrounddam or abedsand aquifer in northern Australia. The Assessment will alsoseekto visit some disused and accidentalundergrounddams(i.e.weirs that have infilled with sediment) in northern Australia, andwill review the internationalliterature on the topic Water storage|87 within an irrigation context. Information gleaned from these studies will help to inform the region- scale MAR analysis. The pre-feasibility assessment of MAR opportunities will also detail representative capital and ongoing costs for different types of infiltration-based MAR operations. This will include a summary of operational constraints – such as the potential for, and management of, aquifer clogging – and identify the nature of investigations required for a feasibility assessment, in accordance with the Australian MAR guidelines (NRMMC-EPHC-NHMRC, 2009). The MAR Guidelines address the suitability of the water recovered from the aquifer for its intended use, in conjunction with potential risks to the environment such as impacts on groundwater-dependent ecosystems. 9.5 References CSIRO (2009) Water in the Fitzroy catchment, pp 61-128 in CSIRO (2009) Water in the Timor Sea Drainage Division. A report to the Australian Government from the CSIRO Northern Australia Sustainable Yields Project. CSIRO Water for a Healthy Country Flagship, Australia. Dillon P (2016) 21st century water storage: Conjunctive use of dams and aquifers. International Water Power & Dam Construction, February 2016. Water Power Magazine. Dillon P, Pavelic P, Page D, Beringen H and Ward J (2009) Managed aquifer recharge: an introduction. Waterlines Report Series No. 13, National Water Commission, Australia. Evans WR, Evans RS and Holland GF (2013) Thematic Paper 2: Conjunctive use and management of groundwater and surface water within existing irrigation commands: the need for a new focus on an old paradigm. Groundwater Governance: A Global Framework for Country Action. GEF ID 3726. Harrington GA and Harrington NM (2015) Lower Fitzroy River Groundwater Review. A report prepared by Innovative Groundwater Solutions for Department of Water, 15 May 2015. Hostetler S (2007) Water Banking. Science for Decision Makers. Australian Government Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry, Bureau of Rural Sciences. Ishida S, Tsuchihara T, Yoshimoto S and Imaizumi M (2011) Sustainable use of groundwater with underground dams. Japan Agricultural Research Quarterly. DOI:10.6090/jarq.45.51. Knapton A (2002) Aquifer storage and recovery project South Goulburn Island: Hydrogeological investigations & trial storage and recovery. Northern Territory Government, Australia. Lennon L, Evans R, George R, Dean F and Parsons S (2014) The role of managed aquifer recharge in developing northern Australia. Ozwater’14, Proceedings of Australia’s International Water Conference & Exhibition, Australian Water Association, Australia. Lewis B (2002) Farm dams: planning, construction and maintenance. Landlinks, Collingwood, Victoria. Ning NSP, Watkins SC, Gawne B and Nielsen DL (2012) Assessing the potential for using wetlands as intermediary storages to conjunctively maintain ecological values and support agricultural demands. Journal of Environmental Management 107, 19–27. NRMMC-EPHC-NHMRC (2009) National Water Quality Management Strategy Australian Guidelines for Water Recycling: Managing Health and Environmental Risks (Phase 2) Managed Aquifer Recharge), National Water Quality Management Strategy Document 24. Natural Resource Management Ministerial Council, Environment Protection and Heritage Council and Australian Health Ministers’ Conference, National Water Quality Management Strategy, Canberra. Viewed 22 February 2016, http://www.environment.gov.au/system/files/resources/d464c044-4c3b-48fa-ab8b- 108d56e3ea20/files/water-recycling-guidelines-mar-24.pdf. Page D, Dillon P, Vanderzalm J, Bekele E, Barry K, Miotlinski K and Levett K (2010) Managed aquifer recharge case study risk assessments. CSIRO, Australia. Petheram C, Rogers L, Eades G, Marvanek S, Gallant J, Read A, Sherman B, Yang A, Waltham N, McIntyreTamwoy S, Burrows D, Kim S, Podger S, Tomkins K, Poulton P, Holz L, Bird M, Atkinson F, Gallant S and Kehoe M (2013). Assessment of surface water storage options in the Flinders and Gilbert catchments. A technical report to the Australian Government from the CSIRO Flinders and Gilbert Agricultural Resource Assessment, part of the North Queensland Irrigated Agriculture Strategy. CSIRO Water for a Healthy Country and Sustainable Agriculture flagships, Australia. Perrin J, Massuel S and Ahmed S (2010) Contribution of percolation tanks to total aquifer recharge: the example of Gajwel watershed, southern India. ISMAR7, Proceedings of the International Symposium on Managed Aquifer Recharge, Abu Dhabi. Read AM, Gallant JC and Petheram C (2012) DamSite: an automated method for the regional scale identification of dam wall locations. 34th Hydrology and Water Resources Symposium, Sydney, Australia, 19–22 November 2012. Engineers Australia, Canberra. Sammonds MJ, Vietz GJ and Costello JF (2012) Using water destined for irrigation to conserve wetland ecosystems: a basis for assessing feasibility. Water Resources Research 49, 4662– 4671. DOI: 10.1002/wrcr/20338. Schwartz D (2015) Andrew Forrest explores underground water reserved in bid to drought-proof Australia. ABC News, ABC. Viewed 29 March 2016, http://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-07- 24/andrew-forrest-explores-upside-down-weirs/6640994. UNEP (1997) Source book of alternative technologies for freshwater augmentation in Latin America and the Caribbean, Organization of American States, Washington. Viewed 29 March 2016, https://www.oas.org/dsd/publications/Unit/oea59e/begin.htm#Contents. Watkins SC, Ning NSP, Gawne B and Nielsen DL (2012) Managing wetlands as off-river storages: impacts on zooplankton communities. Hydrobiologia 701, 51–30. DOI: 10.1007/s10750-012- 1256-0. 10 Socio-economics 10.1 Overview The socio-economics activity will examine the social and economic viability of water resources development with a particular focus on food and fibre production. It will also examine how the values, perspectives and behaviours of individuals, groups and institutions may influence the nature and structure of any economic production. The key questions that this activity seeks to address in the Fitzroy catchment include: • What are the opportunities to profitably expand the existing array of agricultural activities (including aquaculture) through development of local water resources for irrigation? • What new agricultural activities (including aquaculture) might be developed that can viably cover the capital and operating costs of irrigation development within the constraints of transport and market conditions? • How might an irrigation development opportunity be profitably integrated into an existing beef enterprise? • How competitive might an investment in irrigated pasture or cropping be with other forms of development on the property, such as sown pastures or additional fencing and water points? • Given the climate variability of the Fitzroy catchment (especially rainfall and length of seasons), and for particular irrigated crop or forage types, what scale of irrigation development would be required to satisfactorily meet production goals in 80% or 100% of years? • How has the economy of the Fitzroy catchment changed in the past decade compared with other similar regions in Australia and how might it continue to evolve? • What are the potential socio-economic impacts of irrigation investment and development? • What population and economic trends are likely to emerge under different development scenarios? • What are the likely domestic and export supply chain paths for the new agriculture options? • What current transport and logistical limitations to the Fitzroy catchment may impair development? • What are the best-bet infrastructure investment and regulatory strategies to reduce access issues? • What are the current limitations to consolidate bulk products up-country and at ports, and what are the best-bet strategies to reduce these limitations? • What are the food perishability and shrinkage issues of transport from the Fitzroy catchment, and what are the impacts for domestic and international market access and price? • What current legislative, regulatory and policy requirements are relevant to the assessment and development of water resources (including water planning, environmental, tenure and native title, land management, and other relevant domains)? • Are the identified legislative, regulatory and policy requirements appropriate to facilitate the development of water resources while also protecting the catchment’s resource, environmental and Indigenous values? • What cross-jurisdictional (federal/state) legislative, regulatory and policy requirements affect the assessment and development of water resources? • What are key legislative and policy challenges to, and opportunities for, advancing the sustainable development of water resources? There are six major components: 1. multiscale agricultural viability assessment 2. aquaculture viability analysis 3. application of TraNSIT to identify bottlenecks and opportunities for logistics infrastructure 4. exploration of a range of stakeholder perspectives 5. characterisation of the policy and regulatory environment 6. exploration of regional socio-economic impacts. 10.1.1 LINKAGES TO OTHER ACTIVITIES The final design and scope of the economic and associated social analysis undertaken within this activity will necessarily be informed by outputs of other activities within the Assessment. These include, for example, inputs to the scheme scale (e.g. a development supporting multiple individually managed enterprises) and regional economic analysis from enterprise scale modelling undertaken for agriculture and aquaculture viability (Chapter 8), irrigation costs (Chapter 8), water storage costs (Chapter 9), and water availability and reliability estimated from surface water (Chapter 5) and groundwater (Chapter 6) modelling. Production responses under various development scenarios, where applied, will have also been informed by both present and projected climate data (Chapter 3) Assessment of the social licence-to-operate issues, and of the related policy, legislative and regulatory environment is supported by the Indigenous aspirations and water values activity (Chapter 11). The articulation of the social licence-to-operate issues in an ecological context is also supported by the ecology activity (Chapter 12). It will also be indirectly supported by an additional CSIRO-funded project focusing on the multiple values of wetlands in the Darwin catchments, and by projects undertaken by the North Australia Environmental Resources Hub of the National Environmental Science Programme that focuses on Indigenous cultural values and ecological values in the Fitzroy River (Table 1-2). 10.2 Multiscale economic assessment of water resources development for agriculture A set of economic analyses will address the question: Is irrigated agriculture developed on a significant scale (e.g. 30,000 hectares) economically viable? For the purposes of this chapter, these analyses will be conducted at scales ranging from the scheme to the regional scale. Paddock- and farm-scale economic analysis will be undertaken in conjunction with the agriculture and aquaculture viability activity (Chapter 8). Selection of appropriate baselines for potential irrigation development scenarios, while largely based on current land uses and market directions, will necessarily acknowledge the likely evolution of the agricultural sector within the region in the absence of further water infrastructure development. Otherwise, the projected returns on the investment in water development may be overvalued. Of particular focus will be the impacts of capital costs, water availability, crop type, irrigation system and commodity price on the viability of irrigation development, at both the farm scale and the scheme scale. Access to power for water extraction and delivery and the local presence of formed or sealed roads will impact on the cost of irrigation and inwards transport of inputs and outwards transport of produce. Consideration will also be given to the issue of how prospective user water charges might impact on the viability of potential irrigation developments, and the impact of infrastructure development costs being entirely user-funded or shared between private and public contributors. The analysis will be based on a number of case studies and scenarios, including water availability and reliability, and projections of future climate used in other sections of the Assessment. In addition, the economic impact of various logistics infrastructure options will be evaluated (see Section 10.4). 10.3 Economic assessment of water resources development for aquaculture The aquaculture sub-activity (Chapter 8) will identify potential production models (e.g. intensive, semi-intensive and extensive) and likely locations of aquaculture developments. This activity will take the range of likely development scenarios and evaluate the economic viability of the developments, accounting for: • species selection • markets • crop price and price variability • infrastructure and plant requirements, and associated capital and operating costs • regulatory, establishment and commissioning time frames to establish • labour and skills requirements • accessibility of supporting infrastructure (e.g. distance to grid power, transport logistics) • environmental risks to the business • key environmental issues that need mitigating and associated costs • projections of future climate (Chapter 2, Chapter 3). 10.4 Application of TraNSIT to identify logistics infrastructure bottlenecks and opportunities Beyond sourcing the necessary capital investment to support the relatively high cost of new water- supported infrastructure, expanding agricultural development in the Fitzroy catchment presents two further challenges. These are establishing new and viable markets for the produce generated by the development, either internationally or in distant mainland centres, and cost-effectively accessing those markets via efficient supply chains (Ash and Gleeson 2014). Addressing the latter challenge requires an understanding of critical supply chain and infrastructure investment issues that can reduce barriers to market access and help to foster development opportunities. The CSIRO Transport Network Strategic Investment Tool (TraNSIT) performs a mass optimal routing of vehicle movements between thousands of enterprises, and scales up to provide industry-, domain- or locality-wide logistics costs (Higgins et al., 2013). This provides the ability to test infrastructure scenarios that reduce logistics costs for thousands of enterprises. TraNSIT accounts for all features and costs associated with the transport of a commodity across the road and rail network. TraNSIT has been set up for agriculture transport across Australia, with a high level of granularity for industries across northern Australia. It has been used to test the benefits of road upgrades and regulatory changes, and to calculate transport benefits of strategically (or optimally) located processing facilities. TraNSIT has been further developed and applied through initiatives in both the Northern Australia and Agriculture Competitiveness white papers. As part of the implementation of the Northern Australia White Paper, CSIRO is applying TraNSIT to inform the $100 million Northern Australia Beef Roads Fund (CSIRO, 2016) and maximise transport cost savings in beef supply chains across northern Australia. CSIRO is also extending TraNSIT to broader Australian agriculture transport as part of the Agricultural Competitiveness White Paper. It will comprise about 25 commodities – more than 95% of Australia’s agriculture transport volume – including grains, cotton, dairy, rice, sheep, poultry, pigs, sugar and horticulture crops. TraNSIT and related expertise will be used to inform the Assessment (agricultural and aquaculture activity) with regard to the logistics implications and opportunities for the Fitzroy catchment case study, in the event of new irrigated agriculture. This will include: • producing scenarios of logistics costs and freight flows across the road network under different crop–forage options, and likely resulting changes in livestock supply chains • comparing the baseline of existing freight flows and costs to identify bottlenecks across the supply chain network; these may include high logistics costs from long transport distances, poor roads, storage issues, road flooding, lack of suitable processing and port limitations • identifying a range of infrastructure upgrades or new infrastructure that would reduce the costs of logistics for crop–forage options in the catchment. This will include consultation with the state departments of transport (or main roads), agriculture and industry. 10.5 Exploring stakeholder perspectives 10.5.1 POTENTIAL INVESTORS AND THEIR PERSPECTIVES ON IRRIGATION AND AQUACULTURE DEVELOPMENT A range of factors can affect a potential investor’s readiness to use water resources for irrigation and/or aquaculture, and these factors are not restricted to issues of economic viability. Issues affecting the transition to irrigated agriculture and aquaculture include appropriate technical knowledge and skills, compatibility with existing businesses, risk and uncertainty, access to markets, and access to labour and contractors. Transition to irrigation and aquaculture typically requires investors to make a significant up-front investment, to integrate new knowledge, and to operate (at least initially) under higher levels of uncertainty. Part of the new knowledge and uncertainty is likely to stem from the need to persevere through a period adaptive research and learning during which the crop types, varieties and agronomic practices required to maximise the likelihood of success are trialled; or existing technologies are adapted to regional circumstances. The Assessment will seek to increase understanding of the transition issues by exploring other potential investor perspectives on opportunities and barriers to investing in irrigation or aquaculture in the Fitzroy catchment. Potential investors may include: • pastoral companies • family-owned enterprises • Indigenous corporations and enterprises • government as a potentially significant investor in infrastructure, regulation and oversight. The activity will conduct semi-structured interviews with representatives of potential investor categories in the catchment to explore issues affecting uptake of irrigation and aquaculture. Interviews may also be undertaken with state government staff, representatives of regional economic development organisations, local government representatives and other industry stakeholders who are well placed to comment on these issues. 10.5.2 SCOPING SOCIAL LICENCE-TO-OPERATE AND THE WIDER AUDIENCE FOR INVESTMENT IN IRRIGATED FARMING OR AQUACULTURE. Potential investors in irrigation and/or aquaculture are only one set of stakeholders with interests in the management of natural resources in the Fitzroy catchment. The focus of this task concerns the opportunity for the production of food and fibre through the provision of water resources, but other stakeholders derive other goods and services from the natural resource base and are therefore an important additional audience for Assessment findings and irrigation and aquaculture investment discussions. These stakeholders often place high value on the functional integrity of the water ecosystem – for example, to provide recreation, tourism, fishing, aesthetic appreciation, cultural and religious experiences, and aquatic habitat. One set of values (Indigenous values) will be examined in the Indigenous aspirations and water values activity (Chapter 11), but these values also need to be placed in the context of a wider set of social values. To provide this context and to refine understanding of the wider social licence-to- operate for irrigation and aquaculture investment, this task will identify the key stakeholder groups that have an interest in the natural resource management of the catchments – for example, industry groups, non-government organisations and government. Through desktop study and a set of interviews, the Assessment will document and map the interests, issues and concerns of each group that relate to water resources development, and highlight any potential development synergies or conflicts that may be relevant in each catchment and to the broader social licence-to-operate. 10.6 Understanding the policy and regulatory environment for the assessment of water resources and development of water- dependent industries This task will involve: • documentation and analysis of current legislative and policy requirements, and related regulations relevant to the assessment of water resources in the catchment (including water planning, water pricing, environmental, tenure and native title, land management, and other relevant domains) • documentation and analysis of current legislative and policy requirements relevant to the development of water resources in the catchment to support key water-dependent industries such as irrigated agriculture and aquaculture • highlighting of any cross-jurisdictional (national–state) legislative and policy requirements affecting the assessment and development of water resources • identification of key legislative and policy challenges to, and opportunities for, advancing the sustainable development of water resources. Additional legislative and policy analysis may be undertaken in response to client and stakeholder interests in particular jurisdictions, and key findings from other activities in the Assessment. Drawing on consultations undertaken by the wider Assessment team, these will be iteratively evaluated through the course of the Assessment. The research will be complemented by supporting analysis in the Indigenous aspirations and water values activity (Chapter 11), undertaken by the same researcher, which will focus on the specific interests of Indigenous people in water resource assessment and development. Research methods are: • desktop analysis of primary documents relating to case law, legislation, regulations and policy • a literature review and synthesis of scholarly interpretations of law and policy. 10.7 Regional socio-economic impacts Water resources development has socio-economic implications which will be shaped by the history and economic-demographic context of the Fitzroy catchment economy. Given this basic consideration, an exploratory and comprehensive economic and demographic baseline assessment for the catchment is key to better understand how the regional economy has evolved over the last decade, especially in comparison to what has occurred in other regions of northern Australia. Econometric modelling using counterfactual regions will be employed to analyse how the Fitzroy catchment has distinctively developed and how potential future water infrastructure development projects are likely to affect the region’s development pathway compared to other regions of Australia. The empirical methods involved in this regional economic development assessment will include: • Secondary data collection at different levels of aggregation: Statistical Area1 (SA1), Statistical Area 2 (SA2), Local Government Area (LGA) and Statistical Districts (ABS, 2013) • Assessment of trends and current levels of key economic, social and demographic variable • Empirical design of counterfactual regions using statistical methods (e.g. propensity score matching) or quantitative data • Comparison of levels and trends of key variable in the Darwin catchments to the counterfactual group • Econometric modelling designed to capture the effect of water infrastructure development in the Darwin catchments and comparison regions • Projections of potential economic and demographic impacts of future water infrastructure development using the econometric model outputs, numerical simulations and quantitative scenario analyses. With these empirical methods and steps the key question that will be explored is: What are the likely effects of water resources development on different socio-economic indicators, such as direct employment, indirect employment and income, in the Fitzroy catchment? A core part of the analyses will be based on econometric models designed to analyse a set of key regional development indicators, which will be analyses considering scenarios of projecting changes in a 30-year time frame. The analysis will control and examine how regional socio-economic projections could depend on a range of internal and external factors. Finally, all of the analyses to be conducted will be supported by software codes for replication and sensitivity analysis checks of a range of variables identified as having significant influence on model behaviour and results. 10.8 References ABS (2013) 1217.0.55.001 - Glossary of Statistical Geography Terminology, 2013, Australian Bureau of Statistics, Canberra http://www.abs.gov.au/AUSSTATS/abs@.nsf/Lookup/1217.0.55.001Main+Features12013?OpenDocument. Ash, A and Gleeson, T (2014) Northern Australia: Food and Fibre Supply Chain Synthesis Study. CSIRO/ABARES Australia. CSIRO (2016) Transport Network Strategic Investment Tool (TraNSIT) – Application to Northern Australia Beef Roads Submissions. CSIRO, Australia. Higgins, A, Watson, I, Chilcott, C, Zhou, M, GarcÍa-Flores, R, Eady, S, McFallan, S, Prestwidge, D, and Laredo, L (2013) A framework for optimising capital investment and operations in livestock logistics. The Rangeland Journal 35, 181-91. 11 Indigenous aspirations and water values 11.1 Introduction The Indigenous aspirations and water values activity is a pre-feasibility analysis that will provide an overview of key Indigenous values, rights, interests and aspirations with respect to water and irrigated agricultural development in the focal regions. This analysis is intended to assist, inform and underpin future discussions between developers and Indigenous people about particular developments, and their potential positive and negative effects on Indigenous populations. It is supported by and augments previous work by members of the Indigenous activity research team that has addressed Indigenous water issues from a range of perspectives. This includes Indigenous water issues in irrigated agricultural development in Queensland as part of FGARA (Barber 2013); Indigenous hydrological and seasonal knowledge in the Fitzroy catchment (Woodward et al 2012) and the Mitchell catchment (Barber et al 2012); issues of Indigenous water and mining in the Pilbara in Western Australia (Barber and Jackson 2011a), and studies of Indigenous water values and water requirements in north Australian catchments to inform government water planning needs (Barber and Jackson 2011b, Jackson et al., 2011, Woodward et al., 2008). The key questions that this activity will seek to address in the Fitzroy catchment include: • What is the existing documented information pertaining to Indigenous people in each catchment, and to Indigenous water and development issues more generally? This will emphasise: • The historical and contemporary context for Indigenous people living in the Fitzroy catchment: local Indigenous residence and tenure regimes in the Fitzroy catchment key issues in Indigenous water values, rights, interests and aspirations across northern Australia key issues for Indigenous people regarding water and irrigated agricultural development across northern Australia. • How do current Indigenous Traditional Owners of, and residents in, the Fitzroy catchment perceive water resource assessment and development? • What potential issues regarding cultural heritage arise in the Fitzroy catchment from water resource assessment and development? • What are the key legal and policy issues with respect to Indigenous people, water and irrigated agricultural development in Western Australia? • What are the barriers to, and enablers of, Indigenous people participating in water resource development in the Fitzroy catchment? • What are the barriers to, and enablers of, Indigenous people deriving social and economic benefits from water resource development in the Fitzroy catchment? 11.2 Linkages to other activities Components of the Indigenous aspirations and water values activity will have close connections with components of the socio-economics activity (Chapter 10) and the ecology activity (Chapter 12). The Indigenous aspirations and water values activity will support the socio- economics activity by providing specific Indigenous-related content to: • the broad-scale characterisation of stakeholder values as part of scoping the wider social licence-to-operate in the Fitzroy catchment • identification of Indigenous aspirations relating to water resource and agricultural development, as part of the analysis of stakeholder perspectives • consideration of the enablers of, and barriers to, participation in water resource and agricultural development by potential small to medium-sized Indigenous investors in the Fitzroy catchment, particularly local Indigenous corporations and prescribed bodies corporate. The Indigenous aspirations and water values activity will support the ecology activity through the collaborative identification of key natural and cultural assets of significance to Indigenous people. Indigenous knowledge will be crucial to understanding how particular assets have human ecological significance, and how they function as nodes in interconnected networks supporting biocultural diversity and sustainability. Connections with other Assessment activities will be identified as the study progresses. 11.3 Linkages to other research projects in the Fitzroy catchment A range of other research initiatives being undertaken in the Fitzroy catchment provide important context for the research undertaken through the Assessment. Key research initiatives relevant to the Indigenous aspirations and water values activity are projects undertaken through the Northern Hub of the National Environmental Science Programme (NESP) focused on the Fitzroy catchment. Key NESP projects of relevance to the Assessment include those focused on: • Indigenous water requirements – methods for the determination of Indigenous water requirements and incorporation into water planning in the Fitzroy catchment, Kimberley (Project 1.5) • environmental water requirements for the Fitzroy River, Western Australia (Project 1.3.3). A project examining knowledge systems and research requirements in Indigenous Protected Areas is also expected to articulate with aspects of the Assessment. Overall, the NESP projects in the Fitzroy catchment will enable more accurate assessment of Indigenous water values and Indigenous water requirements relating to subsistence and human ecological needs at key locations for Indigenous people in the Fitzroy catchment. This will complement and augment the orientation of the Indigenous aspirations and water values activity, which will encompass issues such as native title and cultural heritage; Indigenous principles for sustainable development; barriers to, and enablers of, participation; the distribution of benefits; and whole-of-catchment and intergenerational impacts. The respective leaders of the Indigenous subproject of this Assessment and of NESP Project 1.5 have a strong history of effective research collaboration with one another across multiple field sites, projects and clients. A key aspect of the Assessment research in the Fitzroy catchment will be to coordinate and collaborate with NESP research to avoid duplication of effort by both researchers and research participants. This encompasses coordinated field consultation and workshop processes, data sharing, and consistency in processes of data analysis to enable complementarity and cross-comparison. 11.4 Context and consultation The catchments under consideration for the Assessment have substantial variations in conditions that are relevant to the Indigenous aspirations and water values activity, including: • governance and tenure regimes • population size and demographics • levels of pre-existing development • existence of previous research • ongoing current and proposed future research. This variation in research context makes ongoing consultation with key stakeholders crucial to determining the exact scope of the Indigenous aspirations and water values activity in the respective jurisdictions. Consultation is expected to continue throughout the conduct of the research and is likely to include stakeholders from: • the Australian Government • state and territory governments • local government • regional land councils • local Indigenous landholders and prescribed bodies corporate • sacred site and cultural heritage bodies • catchment management agencies • Indigenous development agencies • research agencies and researchers. As noted above, a further aspect of context and consultation in the Fitzroy catchment will be the articulation with NESP research, and the processes through which research stakeholders and participants can derive maximum value from the combined research effort in the catchment. 11.5 Scope It is likely that consultations on the scope of the Assessment will be iterative, and that maintaining some flexibility in project scope is important in the initial planning stages. At the outset, it is intended that the research will not seek to directly enable or facilitate consensus with traditional owner groups about water and irrigation development in general, or specific development scenarios considered by the Assessment. Rather, the Assessment will focus on generating a representative set of Indigenous issues, perspectives and aspirations regarding water development that can be used as a guide and foundation for subsequent discussions between public and private developers, and Indigenous interests. The evaluation and refinement of development options undertaken by the other components of the Assessment provide further shared foundations for this process. Further refinements in Assessment scope, including jurisdiction-specific refinements, are expected to be made following further consultation. 11.6 Research ethics Before the fieldwork component of the Assessment begins, the research aims and proposed methods will be reviewed by the CSIRO Social Science Human Research Ethics Committee (CSSHREC). Information sheets and a free, prior and informed consent form will be submitted for approval to the CSSHREC as part of the application. CSSHREC oversight will continue throughout the Assessment. It is expected that further consultation will be undertaken with Indigenous organisations in the catchment regarding the conduct of the research – in particular, with the Kimberley Land Council. This may result in a formal research agreement being negotiated with the Assessment. Participation in the Assessment will be entirely voluntary. Potential research participants will be provided with clear explanations of the research process and outcomes, through a combination of telephone, face-to-face and written contact before they make any decision to participate. Wherever practicable, research participants will be afforded an extended period (of 1 month or more) after first contact by research staff to allow time for further consideration and consultation before making a decision to participate. During initial contact, the Assessment information sheets and the written consent form will be supplied. Verbal consent will then be sought, and confirmed through the participant signing the consent form. The forms will be retained by CSIRO staff in a secure location. Based on experience of past projects, it is expected that comments that appear in any report will be identified using a general group identifier, rather than identifying individual participants. This retains anonymity but also provides a level of geographic specificity. 11.7 Methods 11.7.1 REVIEW OF EXISTING INFORMATION There is some important existing literature regarding Indigenous interests in water in the Fitzroy catchment (Toussaint et al 2001, Toussaint et al 2005, Toussaint 2010, Yu 2000). The review of existing documented information will encompass: • the historical and contemporary context for Indigenous people living in the Fitzroy catchment • local Indigenous residence and tenure regimes • key issues in Indigenous water values, rights, interests and aspirations from across northern Australia relevant to the Fitzroy catchment • key issues for Indigenous people regarding water and irrigated agricultural development from across northern Australia relevant to the Fitzroy catchment Relevant supporting data generated by other activities (e.g. ecological data with biocultural implications) will be integrated with the review. 11.7.2 FIELDWORK AND DIRECT CONSULTATION The fieldwork will emphasise direct consultation with Indigenous Traditional Owners of, and residents in, the Assessment areas, through a combination of: • telephone and face-to-face interviews • group meetings and workshops • trips to key locations • other research methods developed in consultation with local and regional stakeholders. Common approaches and methods to the field consultations will be adopted wherever possible, but it is expected that local Indigenous organisations and individuals in each jurisdiction will influence the degree to which particular methods (e.g. individual interviews) are positioned with respect to other options (large workshops and groups). Participants will be identified through a ‘snowball’ method of iterative consultation with key local and regional Indigenous organisations – land councils, local group-based Indigenous corporations, and catchment management agencies. The objectives and intended methods of the research will be explained, copies of Assessment information and consent forms will be provided, and further direction will be taken about people and organisations who should be contacted in the preliminary scoping and identification stage of the Assessment. Key organisations and individuals nominated by these Indigenous organisations will then be approached for further consultation during planned field trips. 11.7.3 CULTURAL HERITAGE ASSESSMENT Cultural heritage assessments will contain both general and catchment-specific elements. The general elements will encompass: • broad-scale cultural heritage values and issues, with an emphasis on archaeology and material culture • methods required to adequately assess cultural heritage values and issues in any future water resource development • categories and types of impacts on cultural heritage associated with water and irrigated agricultural resource development The jurisdictional and catchment-specific elements will include: • cultural heritage obligations on water resource developers • preliminary desktop analysis of known and potential cultural heritage issues relating to key water storage options identified through the Assessment’s research activities. Further cultural heritage matters are expected to be identified through additional consultation with local Indigenous organisations and cultural heritage specialists. 11.7.4 LEGAL AND POLICY ANALYSIS This component of the activity will involve: • documentation and analysis of current legislative and policy requirements relevant to the inclusion of Indigenous interests in the assessment of water resources in Western Australia • documentation and analysis of current legislative and policy requirements relevant to the inclusion of Indigenous interests in the development of water resources in Western Australia (including water rights, cultural heritage and native title) • highlighting of any cross-jurisdictional (national–state or state–state) legislative and policy requirements affecting Indigenous interests in the assessment and development of water resources • identification of key legislative and policy challenges to, and opportunities for, recognising and valuing Indigenous interests associated with water resources. The analysis will focus on rights and interests recognised in the Australian legal system, while acknowledging that Indigenous customary laws and cultural understandings of water that are not currently recognised by the Australian legal system are important considerations, which will be addressed in this activity and/or key findings from other activities in the Assessment. Drawing on consultations undertaken by the wider Assessment team, these issues will be iteratively evaluated through the course of the Assessment. The research will be complemented by supporting analysis in the socio-economics activity (Chapter 10), focusing on the broader legislative and policy environment relevant to water resource assessment and development. The two primary research methods adopted are: • desktop analysis of primary documents relating to legislation, regulations and policy • a literature review and synthesis of scholarly interpretations of law and policy. 11.8 Data analysis and preliminary dissemination The data from the literature review and interviews will be iteratively analysed using NVivo qualitative analytical software (QSR International, 2016) to identify major themes and key findings. Key information and research participant comments from the interviews will be identified, extracted, and then formally checked with the respective research participants to ensure that they are an accurate reflection of their views, and can be used in further analysis and public presentation. The resulting information and analysis will then be combined into a draft research report. The draft report will be disseminated to local Indigenous research participants and key Indigenous stakeholders for further comment, correction and confirmation. It will be augmented by further presentations to group meetings. The resulting feedback will be incorporated into a revised draft report, which will then be subjected to scientific peer review and further community comment before it is finalised. It is expected that undertaking concurrent field research across the three jurisdictions will yield a range of contrasts and comparative insights. Where such an approach will be beneficial, additional data, findings, issues and analysis from other jurisdictions may be referred to in the analysis of the local jurisdiction. A further component of final reporting will identify a range of matters (values, rights, interests, aspirations, themes, issues, principles, strategies, pathways, etc.) that are common across jurisdictions. Such cross-jurisdictional analyses will be further augmented by comparison with findings from NESP and other CSIRO research activities in the same jurisdictions. 11.9 References Barber M (2013) Indigenous water values, rights and interests in the Flinders and Gilbert catchments. A technical report to the Australian Government from the CSIRO Flinders and Gilbert Agricultural Resource Assessment, part of the North Queensland Irrigated Agriculture Strategy CSIRO Water for a Healthy Country and Sustainable Agriculture flagships, Australia, Canberra. Barber M and Jackson S (2011a) Indigenous water values and water planning in the upper Roper River, Northern Territory. CSIRO, Darwin. Barber M and Jackson S (2011b) Water and Indigenous people in the Pilbara, Western Australia: a preliminary study. CSIRO, Darwin. Barber M and Jackson S (2012) Indigenous water management and water planning in the upper Roper River, Northern Territory: history and implications for contemporary water planning. CSIRO, Darwin. Barber M, Shellberg J, Jackson S, and Sinnamon V (2012) Working knowledge: local ecological and hydrological knowledge about the flooded forest country of Oriners Station, Cape York. CSIRO, Darwin. Jackson S, Finn M, Woodward E, Featherston P (2011) Indigenous socio-economic values and river flows. CSIRO and TRaCK, Darwin. QSR International (2016) QSR InternationalTM NVivoTM software. Viewed 14 June 2016, http://www.qsrinternational.com/product. Toussaint S, 2010 Fitzroy valley Indigenous groups and the multi-criteria value of fishing and fish: a report for the social and economic values project (2.2) for Tropical Rivers and Coastal Knowledge (TRaCK). University of Western Australia, Perth. Toussaint S, Sullivan P, and Yu S (2005) Water ways in Aboriginal Australia: an interconnected analysis. Anthropological Forum 15:61–74. Toussaint S, Sullivan P, Yu S, and Mularty Jnr. M (2001) Fitzroy Valley Indigenous cultural values study. Report for the Water and Rivers Commission. Perth. Woodward E, Jackson S, Finn M, and Marfurra McTaggart P (2012) Utilising Indigenous seasonal knowledge to understand indigenous aquatic resource use and inform water resource management. Ecological Management and Restoration 13. Woodward E, Jackson S, and Straton A, (2008) Water resources of the Howard River region, Northern Territory: A report on the social and cultural values and a stakeholder assessment of water use scenarios CSIRO Sustainable Ecosystems, Darwin. Yu S, (2000) Ngapa Kunangkul: living water. Report on the Indigenous cultural values of groundwater in the La Grange sub–basin. Perth. Part IV Trade-offs: How can development opportunities be maximised by understanding and quantifying trade-offs with existing industries and ecosystems? 12 Ecology The ecology activity seeks to assess the potential for impacts on freshwater and marine ecosystems of possible changes to flow regimes due to new infrastructure and water extraction in the Assessment area. The Assessment focus is on water-related ecosystems because water developments, particularly irrigation, can result in substantial changes to streamflow and water quality, yet they typically occupy only a small proportion of the landscape (<1% of a catchment). Impacts on terrestrial systems will be dealt with in an issues paper, which will be prepared to identify future assessment priorities within the catchment. The ecology activity analysis is limited to understanding the impact of flow changes on the ecological system, with changes in land use and nutrient enrichment characterised qualitatively. The key questions that this activity seeks to address in the Fitzroy catchment include: • What terrestrial, freshwater and marine assets are found within the catchment? • What freshwater and marine assets are of key significance? • In freshwater and marine systems, what is the current understanding of the dependencies of assets on flow? • In freshwater and marine systems, what is the current understanding of the other system drivers that can affect assets? • In freshwater and marine systems, what are the potential impacts of infrastructure development on assets? • Using qualitative and quantitative analysis methods, what are the predicted impacts on freshwater and marine systems? • What is the certainty of the predicted outcomes? Northern Australia has diverse and highly valued natural ecosystems, which provide commercial, recreational and cultural value, as well as maintaining ecological functions and habitats for plants and animals (Abel and Rolfe, 2009). The ecology of aquatic ecosystems is fundamentally linked to the seasonality of the wet–dry tropical climate that regulates the flow regime, as well as the landscape it drains (Warfe et al., 2011; Aquatic Ecosystems Task Group, 2012). The natural flow regime and connectivity between aquatic ecosystems are critical for sustaining freshwater and marine biodiversity, and natural ecological processes. Many of northern Australia’s aquatic systems are in excellent condition; historical and current use of, and change in, surface and ground waters has typically been localised. The freshwater ecosystems in northern Australia have a rich biodiversity, supporting at least 170 fish species, 150 waterbird species, 30 aquatic to semi-aquatic reptiles, more than 60 amphibian species and more than 100 macroinvertebrate families (Van Dam et al., 2008). The estuaries of northern Australia also support a rich biodiversity, and are critical in supporting productive fisheries, where the greater freshwater inflow to estuaries results in increased fisheries production (Aquatic Ecosystems Task Group, 2012). Catchment flows also support high-value commercial and recreational marine fisheries, such as the Northern Prawn Fishery, as well as fisheries for barramundi, mudcrab and a suite of other species that are important to commercial recreational and Indigenous fisheries, which have high cultural significance. Several species of conservation significance, such as dugongs, sea turtles and a variety of sharks and rays, as well as habitats such as mangrove forests and seagrass beds, are also dependent on coastal and estuarine systems, and the support of catchment flows and nutrient inputs. 12.1 Catchment overview The Fitzroy River has a high aquatic biodiversity (Vogwill, 2015). Fauna of interest in the Fitzroy catchment include barramundi, freshwater sawfish, dwarf sawfish and the saltwater crocodile; these species are of regional or national interest (Bartolo, 2006; CENRM, 2010). The Fitzroy River includes 35 of 43 fish species known from the Kimberley, with 18 of these being endemic (Department of Water, 2009). The Fitzroy features three International Union for Conservation of Nature–listed critically endangered fish: freshwater sawfish, dwarf sawfish and northern river shark. Freshwater whipray is listed as vulnerable (Morgan et al., 2004; Thorburn et al., 2004; Thorburn and Morgan, 2005a, b; IUCN, 2011). King Sound and the adjacent Fitzroy River are the only known nursery areas for freshwater sawfish in the Kimberley (Thorburn and Morgan, 2005a, b). A high-value habitat in the Fitzroy River is in-channel permanent pools. Some of these are hydrologically connected to groundwater during the dry season, and are considered the only persistent water source for terrestrial and aquatic fauna, including waterbirds (Vogwill, 2015). Seasonal flooding of the river sustains off-river wetlands and leads to a boom in productivity, while the groundwater baseflow helps to maintain some permanent pools as important refuge habitat (Vogwill, 2015). The Fitzroy catchment has three wetlands of national significance: Geikie Gorge, Camballin Floodplain and Gladstone Lake (Environment Australia, 2001; SKM, 2009). Camballin Floodplain supports internationally significant waterbird populations (Department of Water, 2009). Geikie Gorge is located within a national park, and is a popular tourist destination. The Fitzroy River end-of-system, King Sound, is high-value estuarine–coastal habitat. It is a large semi-enclosed water body that is fringed by broad tidal mudflats. The tidal mudflats and mangroves provide nursery habitat for a wide variety of fish (Loneragan et al., 2002) and crustaceans, which are important prey for inshore dolphins. Australian snubfin dolphins and the Indo–Pacific humpback dolphin use the tidal rivers, while bottlenose dolphins are found in deeper waters (Thiele, 2005). 12.2 Ecology activity breakdown The ecology activity has three major tasks: 1) identification and prioritisation of assets; 2) conceptual model development to characterise flow–ecology relationships and the potential impacts of infrastructure development; and 3) analysis of potential impacts using quantitative and qualitative methods, and development of an assessment workflow. The asset and conceptual model methods are described jointly for marine and freshwater systems (activities 1 and 2), whereas the analysis methods (activity 3) are described separately. The activity will draw on stakeholders from Australian, state and territory government agencies; universities and other research providers; and industry bodies. Stakeholders will provide input and review to each of the steps, and be engaged through workshops and one-on-one meetings. This activity is highly reliant on the surface and groundwater hydrology activities for flow inputs, the Earth observation activity for remote sensing of waterholes and water-dependent vegetation communities, the Indigenous aspirations and water values activity for cultural assets and the land suitability activity for areas of potential development. 12.2.1 IDENTIFICATION AND PRIORITISATION OF ASSETS A review and prioritisation of assets will be undertaken for each catchment. For the purposes of the Assessment, assets are defined as: • listed threatened, vulnerable or endangered species or communities • wetlands, species or communities that are formally recognised in international agreements • providing vital habitat for water-dependent flora and fauna • near-natural, rare or unique habitats for water-dependent flora and fauna • supporting significant biodiversity for water-dependent flora and fauna • recreational, commercial and cultural value. Defined assets must be water-dependent – that is, they must have some level of dependency on groundwater or surface water flows, resulting in either periodic or sustained inundation. Species and community assets will be identified based on their conservation status in Commonwealth, state and territory listings. Reviews of existing asset datasets such as state and territory data, commercial and recreational fisheries data, spatial data and species occurrence data will be used. For Indigenous assets, this activity will rely on the Indigenous aspirations and water values activity (Chapter 11). Habitat-based assets can include wetlands, rivers, karst and other groundwater-dependent ecosystems, saltmarshes, estuaries and coastal areas (BMT WBM, 2010). Key habitats such as mangroves, near-shore coral reefs and seagrass beds, and salt flats may also be included, and used as target or indicator species of marine ecosystem health. To determine the significance of an asset that is not formally recognised in an international or national agreement, the High Ecological Value Aquatic Ecosystems Criteria will be used (BMT WBM, 2010): • Diversity – the aquatic ecosystem exhibits exceptional diversity of species, habitats, or geomorphological features or processes. • Distinctiveness – the aquatic ecosystem is rare or threatened; the habitat supports rare or threatened species or communities. • Vital habitat – an aquatic ecosystem provides vital habitat for flora and fauna species. • Naturalness – the aquatic ecosystem is near natural and not adversely impacted by existing threats. • Representativeness – the aquatic ecosystem is an outstanding example of an aquatic ecosystem type. A threat and value matrix will be used to prioritise assets. Information for prioritising assets will be obtained from existing spatial databases, literature information and expert input. The outcome will be the development of an asset map, identifying places of significance and ranges of species of significance. 12.2.2 CONCEPTUAL MODELS Conceptual models will be developed based on the best available information. They provide a representation of the biophysical drivers of function within any given system. Conceptual models will also guide the subsequent analysis step. Conceptual models can take many forms, including maps and diagrams, such as causal box and arrow diagrams; this activity will use causal box and arrow diagrams. These conceptual models will synthesise the best available knowledge of flow–ecology relationships for freshwater and marine assets, and identify potential risks from other sources, including water resource development and agricultural intensification. Other risks include physical changes (e.g. increases in sedimentation) and water quality changes (e.g. increased nutrients), as well as invasive species (spread of pests and weeds). For the subsequent analyses, the ecology activity will be limited to linking an ecological response to a flow. The conceptual models will underpin qualitative, semiquantitative and quantitative analyses of the impacts of water extraction and flow regime change on selected marine and coastal assets, such as habitats, species and natural resource production values (e.g. coastal and offshore fisheries). The conceptual models will highlight lateral and longitudinal connectivity of systems. They will incorporate knowledge about the life history of critical species and habitats, and ecological flow relationships such as threshold effects, where such information exists. To understand the potential for impacts of infrastructure on assets, a synthesis of existing knowledge will be undertaken, documenting the potential effects that infrastructure can have on physical systems (e.g. connectivity and migration; flow triggers and thresholds; sediment, nutrient fluxes and productivity; salinity; exacerbation of pests and weeds), and how this affects assets. This activity is reliant on literature information and interactions with the National Environmental Science Programme (NESP) Northern Hub. The development of conceptual models involves engagement with Commonwealth, state and territory government agencies; the NESP Northern Hub and NESP Water Quality Hub; industry stakeholder groups; and other research providers. 12.2.3 ANALYSIS OF POTENTIAL IMPACTS ON ASSETS For marine and freshwater assets that are of high priority, the relationship between flows and assets will be analysed. A multiple-lines-of-evidence approach will be used for the analysis. Where information is poor, the environmental assessment will be qualitative. Where information is rich, the assessment will be semiquantitative or quantitative. Analysis methods are described separately below for marine and freshwater assets. Marine systems The analysis of potential impacts on marine assets will focus on species and habitats of significance, and natural resource production values (e.g. coastal and offshore fisheries). Water requirements will be defined for fisheries, conservation assets, and other marine–coastal assets in estuarine and marine habitats. These will encompass end-of-system flow volume and timing as they affect key ecological processes and habitats, and life histories of selected species. Where relevant, water quality (e.g. nutrient and sediment loads) requirements will also be defined. Water requirements will be defined through a literature review, from expert elicitation in workshops, and from existing ecological models For selected assets, the analysis will seek to develop ecological flow thresholds and corresponding preference curves and response indicators. The focus will vary between case study areas, depending on available ecosystem knowledge and data, need and time. The analysis will use qualitative methods developed for the Assessment, methods from Bayliss et al. (2014), and the semiquantitative Productivity Sustainability Assessments method (Thorburn and Morgan, 2005a), which has been applied to the entire Northern Prawn Fishery (Griffiths et al., 2006). For selected species (e.g. banana prawns, barramundi, threadfin salmon, black bream, mudcrabs) in commercial, recreational and Indigenous fisheries that have sufficient time series data, catch– effort–flow empirical models will be developed to assess case study development experiments. These models use statistical methods developed in Bayliss et al. (2014) for the Gulf assessment of ecological and fisheries values. Freshwater systems The analysis of potential impacts on freshwater assets will focus on species and habitats of significance, and potential for changes across the landscape. The analysis will entail collation of existing data and knowledge, and a synthesis of literature that describes the condition, drivers of change and flow requirements of assets. The synthesis will seek to identify baseline asset data; key surface water and groundwater species requirements; existing flow–ecology relationships, including environmental water requirements; water quality as modifiers of outcomes; and information on other non–flow related system drivers. Scientific studies, existing management plans and expert knowledge will be used as inputs to the analysis. For the Mitchell and Fitzroy catchments, synthesis activities will be undertaken with the NESP Northern Hub. An uncertainty analysis will be conducted to explore the sensitivity of models to input information, metric selection, combination method and flow scenarios. Species of significance To evaluate the potential for change in significant species, a population condition approach is being used, which relates the life history requirements of a species to a flow regime. Population condition reflects a range of aspects of relevance to the species, such as the population size, the age structure of the population and the health of individuals. This approach is similar to the Ecological Elements method (IUCN, 2011) applied in the Murray–Darling Basin. The method uses environmental water requirements to define the relationship between specific flow attributes – such as waterhole depth; and flow magnitude, duration and timing – and species population condition. Environmental water requirements will be defined as thresholds. Preference curves will be used to represent trajectories of population condition change, to reflect how the sequencing of flow events in a flow regime can impact on a species’ life history. The approach can consider species requirements across river reaches, floodplains, waterholes or wetlands as habitats, provided that the habitat is represented in the hydrological and inundation models. The outcome is a set of environmental water requirements that enable an assessment of change in a species’ population condition based on a modelled flow, which is represented as an assessment workflow (a set of automated steps) that can be used for any assessment scenario. Habitats of significance To evaluate the potential for change in significant habitats, a habitat condition approach is being used. This uses a similar approach to that used for species of significance, drawing on the Ecological Elements method (Overton et al., 2014). Habitat condition can be applied to a single habitat type (a waterhole) or to a mosaic of habitats (floodplain wetland mosaic), where the habitat quality and extent support a diversity of species and processes, such as foraging or breeding. The method uses environmental water requirements to define the relationship between specific flow attributes – such as waterhole depth; and flow magnitude, duration and timing – and habitat condition. Preference curves are used to represent trajectories of habitat condition change, to reflect how the sequencing of flow events in a flow regime can impact on habitat extent and quality. Water quality will be considered in the analysis as a potential modifier of outcomes. The approach can consider water requirements for river reaches, floodplains, waterholes or wetlands as habitats, provided that the habitat is represented in the hydrological and inundation models. The outcome is a set of environmental water requirements that enable an assessment of change in habitat condition based on a modelled flow, which is represented as an assessment workflow (a set of automated steps) that can be used for any assessment scenario. Landscape diversity To evaluate the potential for change in landscapes, a landscape diversity approach is being used. This approach will assess the potential for change across assets of different types (e.g. wetlands, floodplains, river channels, waterholes). The approach will be at a landscape scale, to explore how changes in flow may impact on the diversity of habitats and processes across the landscape. The method will focus on the use of flow metrics that have ecological significance, which will be evaluated at each gauging point in the river system models. The flow metrics will include commence to flow; length of inter-wet and dry periods; frequency, seasonality and duration of inundation; and depth. Changes in flow metrics from the modelled scenarios will be compared with the ‘baseline’ hydrological model. This approach enables an assessment of potential hydrological change across the landscape. The outcome is a set of flow metrics and flow thresholds that enable an assessment of landscape diversity based on modelled flows. This will be represented as part of an assessment workflow (a set of automated steps) that can be used for any assessment scenario. 12.3 References Abel N and Rolfe J (2009) 12 Public and private conservation of aquatic systems in northern Australia: threats and opportunities. Northern Australia Land and Water Science Review. Northern Australia Land and Water Taskforce, Canberra. Aquatic Ecosystems Task Group (2012) Aquatic ecosystems toolkit. Module 3: Guidelines for identifying high ecological value aquatic ecosystems (HEVAE). Australian Government Department of Sustainability, Environment, Water, Population and Communities, Canberra. Bartolo R (2006) Stakeholder views: assets and threats to the tropical rivers of the Fitzroy catchment, WA. Unpublished workshop report. Derby. Bayliss P, Buckworth R and Dichmont C (2014) Assessing the water needs of fisheries and ecological values in the Gulf of Carpentaria. Final report prepared for the Queensland Department of Natural Resources and Mines. CSIRO, Australia. BMT WBM (2010) Ecological character description for Kakadu National Park Ramsar site. A report prepared for the Australian Government Department of Sustainability, Environment, Water, Population and Communities, Canberra. CENRM (2010) Fitzroy River catchment management plan. Centre of Excellence in Natural Resource Management, University of Western Australia, Perth. Department of Water (2009) Fitzroy catchment subregion overview and future directions Kimberley regional water plan working discussion paper. Government of Western Australia, Perth. Environment Australia (2001) A Directory of Important Wetlands in Australia, 3rd edn. Environment Australia, Canberra. Griffiths S, Kenyon R, Bulman C, Dowdney J, Williams A, Sporcic M and Fuller M (2006) Ecological risk assessment for the effects of fishing: report for the Northern Prawn Fishery. A report for the Australian Fisheries Management Authority, Canberra. IUCN (2011) The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species, version 2011.2. : IUCN Species Survival Commission, Gland, Switzerland, and Cambridge, United Kingdom. Viewed May 2016, http://www.iucnredlist.org. Loneragan N, Die D, Kenyon R, Taylor B, Vance D, Manson F, Pendrey B and Venables W (2002) The growth, mortality, movements and nursery habitats of red-legged banana prawns (Penaeus indicus) in the Joseph Bonaparte Gulf: final report to the FRDC. FRDC project 97/105. Fisheries Research and Development Corporation, Canberra. Morgan D, Allen M, Bedford P and Horstman M (2004) Fish fauna of the Fitzroy River in the Kimberley region of Western Australia – including the Bunuba, Gooniyandi, Ngarinyin, Nyikina and Walmajarri Aboriginal names. Records of the Western Australian Museum 22, 147–161. SKM (2009) Ecological assets of northern Australia study. Sinclair Knight Merz, Canberra. Thiele D (2005) Report of an opportunistic survey for Irrawaddy dolphins, Orcaella brevirostris, off the Kimberley coast, northwest Australia. Thorburn DC and Morgan DL (2005a) Threatened fishes of the world: Glyphis sp. C (Carcharhinidae). Environmental Biology of Fishes 73, 140. Thorburn, D. C. and D. L. Morgan (2005b) Threatened fishes of the world: Pristis microdon (Pristidae). Environmental Biology of Fishes 72,465–466. Thorburn D, Morgan D,Gill H, Johnson M, Wallace-Smith H, Vigilante T, Gorring A, Croft I and Fenton J (2004) Biology and cultural significance of the freshwater sawfish Pristis microdon in the Fitzroy River, Kimberley, Western Australia. A report to the Threatened Species Network, Sydney. Van Dam RA, Bartolo R and Bayliss P (2008) Identification of ecological assets, pressures and threats. In: Bartolo R, Bayliss P and Van Dam RA (eds) Ecological risk assessment for Australia’s northern tropical rivers. Land and Water Australia, Canberra. Vogwill R (2015) Water resources of the Mardoowarra (Fitzroy River) catchment. University of Western Australia, Perth. Warfe DM, Pettit NE, Davies PM, Pusey BJ, Hamilton SK, Kennard MJ, Townsend SA, Bayliss P, Ward DP, Douglas MM, Burford MA, Finn M, Bunn SE and Halliday IA (2011) The ‘wet–dry’ in the wet–dry tropics drives river ecosystem structure and processes in northern Australia. Freshwater Biology 56, 2169–2195. Part V Case study experiments, reports, key protocols and standards 13 Case study experiments 13.1 Rationale By its nature, the Assessment will produce information from a very broad range of disciplines. This is as it should be because the development of northern Australia will require the integration of knowledge from a similarly broad range of disciplines. The purpose of the case study experiments is to help the reader: • understand how to ‘put the Assessment information together’ to answer their own questions about water resource development in the Fitzroy catchment • understand the type and likely scale of opportunity of different types of water resource development in selected geographic parts of the Assessment area • explore some of the nuances associated with ‘greenfield’ developments in the Fitzroy catchment, which are often difficult to capture in discipline-based information. 13.1.1 WHAT THE CASE STUDIES ARE DESIGNED TO DO AND NOT DO Although the case study experiments are designed to be realistic representations – that is, they will be ‘located’ in specific parts of the Assessment area, and use specific water and land resources, and realistic intensification options – they are illustrative only. They are not designed to demonstrate, recommend or promote particular development opportunities being proposed by individual development proponents, nor are they CSIRO’s recommendations on how development in the Fitzroy catchment should unfold. 13.2 Proposed case study framings The specific case study experiments will be developed over time as the Assessment proceeds, and the Assessment team begins to assemble information from a range of sources and disciplines. These sources will include ideas generated by stakeholders within the Assessment area and will be guided by current enterprise types found in the Assessment area. Proposed case study experiments will then be tested with the Program Steering Committee before being finalised. Although the case study experiments are yet to be developed, the following framings can be used as a guide: • large schemes, privately funded (greater than about $500 million) • large schemes, publicly funded (greater than about $500 million) • medium-size schemes, such as might be developed by pastoral corporates or large family businesses (from tens of millions of dollars up to about $500 million) • small-scale schemes, such as an individual or family business might develop (from about $1 million to about $10 million). Coupled to this framing, various methods of water capture and supply will be considered. These will include surface water capture, groundwater and managed aquifer recharge. Various agricultural and aquaculture systems will be included in the case study experiments. Some of these systems will be relatively straightforward, whereas others will include integrated crop– livestock systems; (possibly) agriculture–aquaculture systems; and industrial-scale systems for production of commodities, energy and by-products. The case study experiments will consider the costs and challenges of supplying water using various configurations of capture and distribution, the timing of water supply and demand, assumptions concerning annual water yield (at varying reliabilities), and conveyance and field application losses. Soil and landscape attributes will be considered in terms of their proximity to the water supply, risks such as secondary salinity, and suitability for various crop and aquaculture types. Interactions and links with other industries (e.g. the beef industry), processing facilities, transport logistics, and hard and community infrastructure requirements will be factored. The case studies will be grounded within the social and cultural context of the Fitzroy catchment, including infrastructure availability and constraints. Economic analyses will consider gross margins, as well as the ability of the enterprise to service capital costs. Ecological changes will be assessed using Ecologic Elements modelling (Chapter 12), and a range of trade-offs will be articulated. 13.2.1 EXAMPLE CASE STUDY EXPERIMENTS One way to envisage what these case studies will look like is to consider those used in previous land and water resource studies in the Flinders catchment (Petheram et al., 2013a) and the Gilbert catchment (Petheram et al., 2013b). The analysis undertaken by Petheram et al. (2013a, b) will be further refined as part of the Fitzroy Water Resource Assessment, noting that in-stream dams will not be considered in the Flinders catchment. In the Flinders catchment, three case studies were developed: 1. An instream dam of approximately 250 GL storage with an annual yield of 40 GL at 85% reliability. This water would be used to grow sorghum grain to supply a newly established local feedlot and abattoir. 2. An offstream storage of approximately 130 GL with an annual yield of 34 GL at 85% reliability. This water would be used to irrigate rice. 3. Small-scale offstream water harvesting at a number of sites throughout the catchment. These were combined to review the opportunity and impact from five different catchment entitlements from 80 to 560 GL. Crop areas of about 500 ha each were used to grow a range of high-value crops, such as mungbean, cotton and rice. In the Gilbert catchment, three case studies were similarly developed: 1. An instream dam of approximately 230 GL storage with an annual yield of 172 GL at 85% reliability. This water would be used to grow a rotation of cotton, peanuts and irrigated fodder, with a new cotton gin located in Georgetown. 2. Two new instream dams with a combined capacity of 725 GL and an annual yield of 498 GL at 85% reliability. This water would be used to grow sugarcane, which would be supplied to a newly established sugar mill. 3. Raising of the dam wall of a small existing dam by 2 m to provide storage of 20 GL and an annual yield of 17 GL at 85% reliability. This water would be used to grow irrigated fodder, to provide a supplementary feed source to the local beef industry and hay for use in drought years. 14 Reports, products, protocols and standards 14.1 Reports, products and protocols The Assessment management team will provide quality assurance for all data and reports produced from the Northern Australia Water Resource Assessment. To meet this objective, the team will: • provide templates, standards, processes and workflows for reporting • review all technical material • edit and produce catchment and summary reports • develop processes, and provide information sheets and training to Assessment members on data management protocols, the CSIRO metadata catalogue, and the CSIRO data access portal and data audit trails. SharePoint is a website that provides a central storage for the Assessment team to share documents that require version control. The Assessment team will store all versions of the catchment and summary report documents on the CSIRO SharePoint. All final versions of the technical reports will be stored on the SharePoint https://teams.csiro.au/units/NAWRA/_layouts/15/start.aspx#/SitePages/Home.aspx. A Google Drive site has been established for the Assessment team. This will be the team’s primary collaboration space to share non-sensitive documents, calendars, photos, meeting minutes, guideline documents and videos, stakeholder contact information and other similar material. Table 1-1 details key deliverables for the Fitzroy Water Resource Assessment. These will be complemented by a minimum of 15 technical reports, which will provide the technical underpinning for the summary material. Alternative (non-report) products for the delivery of information to key stakeholders will be investigated during the course of the Assessment and in consultation with stakeholders. For example, the CSIRO data access portal was used as the final repository for the land suitability grids in the Flinders and Gilbert Agricultural Resource Assessment. 14.2 Standards The Assessment management team will define editorial standards to guide authors in reporting the findings of the Assessment. These standards will include map and figure conventions, and will be available in a document titled Reporting standards, which will be available to the Assessment team on Google Drive at https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/0BxAzeqgsYoOrdXc1VVFnaWZwYkE. These standards are based on: • the Australian Government Style manual for authors, editors and printers • CSIRO brand identity guidelines • standards used in the Flinders and Gilbert Agricultural Resource Assessment, and the Sustainable Yield projects • the Australian Oxford dictionary. Since many specialist terms are not found in these resources, additional conventions specific to the Assessment will be developed in consultation with the Assessment team. Reporting standards will be a ‘living document’ that changes as the Assessment progresses, to document decisions on language and formatting. Conventions specified in early drafts, however, will not be changed unless absolutely necessary; the aim is to add conventions, not to backtrack on earlier decisions. Reporting standards will be published as a report at the end of the Assessment. CONTACT US t 1300 363 400 +61 3 9545 2176 e csiroenquiries@csiro.au w www.csiro.au AT CSIRO, WE DO THE EXTRAORDINARY EVERY DAY We innovate for tomorrow and help improve today – for our customers, all Australians and the world. Our innovations contribute billions of dollars to the Australian economy every year. As the largest patent holder in the nation, our vast wealth of intellectual property has led to more than 150 spin-off companies. With more than 5,000 experts and a burning desire to get things done, we are Australia’s catalyst for innovation. CSIRO. WE IMAGINE. WE COLLABORATE. WE INNOVATE. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION Land and Water Dr Peter Stone t +61 7 3833 5659 e peter.stone@csiro.au w www.csiro.au/en/research/LWF Land and Water Dr Cuan Petheram t +61 2 6246 5987 e cuan.petheram@csiro.au w www.csiro.au/en/research/LWF Agriculture Dr Ian Watson t +61 7 4753 8606 e ian.watson@csiro.au w www.csiro.au/en/research/AF Land and Water Dr Chris Chilcott t +61 8 8944 8422 e chris.chilcott@csiro.au w www.csiro.au/en/research/LWF