Adelaide International Bird Sanctuary

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Adelaide International Bird Sanctuary
South Australia
Port Adelaide aerial view.jpg
Dry Creek salt crystallisation pans
Adelaide International Bird Sanctuary is located in South Australia
Adelaide International Bird Sanctuary
Adelaide International Bird Sanctuary
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Managing authorities Department of Environment, Water and Natural Resources

The Adelaide International Bird Sanctuary is a proposed protected area in South Australia to be established by the South Australian (SA) government on the northeast coast of Gulf St Vincent, between Port Parham in the north and the southern end of Barker Inlet in the south, over the period 2014 to 2018 for the purpose of rehabilitating land used as salt pans, protecting habitat for international migratory shorebirds, managing water quality in adjoining parts of Gulf St Vincent, creation of ‘green’ space, development of niche tourism and creation of opportunities for indigenous people.

This very low-gradient, low-energy coastline, containing a broad lateral extent of subtidal seagrass meadows, intertidal mangroves and supratidal saltmarshes and salinas, extends from the Adelaide metropolitan area as far as the head of Gulf St Vincent, and is also known as the "Samphire Coast". The coastline north of Port Parham, outside the proposed sanctuary, also has a high degree of protection through being in the Port Wakefield Proof and Experimental Establishment, and the Clinton Conservation Park.

The proposal

The Adelaide International Bird Sanctuary is a proposed protected area to be established by the SA government for the northeast coast of Gulf St Vincent extending from Adelaide to its immediate north with the view of achieving the five key outcomes:

  • Protection of habitat particularly used by shorebirds that migrate over large extents of the Earth’s surface.[1][2]
  • Management of water quality in Gulf St Vincent particularly in respect to stormwater and wastewater produced in the northern suburbs of Adelaide and its treatment prior to release into Gulf St Vincent.[1]
  • Creation of ‘green’ space 'on the fringes of the northern Adelaide Plains that will allow stormwater recycling, absorb carbon dioxide and enhance the amenity and attractiveness of the region'.[1]
  • Tourism development that ‘provide opportunities for developing exclusive, high-end tourism experiences with a focus on national and international birdwatchers’.[1]
  • Indigenous involvement via measures to ‘employ and engage Aboriginal people and use Indigenous knowledge to develop and implement environmental and cultural heritage education and interpretation programs.’[1]

A driver for the proposal is the need to rehabilitate land previously used at Dry Creek, St Kilda and other localities as salt pans and managing the environmental risks arising from the cessation of salt evaporation process of salt extract such as exposing of acid sulphate soils.[3]

Extent

The Adelaide International Bird Sanctuary is proposed to extend from Barker Inlet in the south to Port Parham in the north over a distance of Lua error in Module:Convert at line 272: attempt to index local 'cat' (a nil value).. Its extent will both overlap and adjoin existing protected areas such as the Port Gawler and Torrens Island conservation parks, the Upper Gulf St Vincent Marine Park, the Barker Inlet Aquatic Reserve, the St Kilda – Chapman Creek Aquatic Reserve and the Adelaide Dolphin Sanctuary.[4][5] The sanctuary will also include Lua error in Module:Convert at line 272: attempt to index local 'cat' (a nil value). of land that adjoins the Port Gawler Conservation Park and Buckland Park lake, which was purchased in 2013 by the SA government with financial contributions from the following non-for-profit organisations - Nature Foundation SA and Birds SA.[5][6] It is proposed that the sanctuary will be proclaimed as a conservation park under the National Parks and Wildlife Act 1972, in order to ‘provide one of the highest levels of protection allowed for by state legislation’.[5]

Timeline

The SA government committed to the proposal at the state election held in March 2014. The 2014-15 State Budget included expenditure of A$0.3 million for the purpose of commencing work.[7][8] A formal announcement about the proposal was made by Ian Hunter, the Minister for Sustainability, Environment and Conservation on 20 August 2014, including the purchase of Lua error in Module:Convert at line 272: attempt to index local 'cat' (a nil value). of land formerly held by salt operators, but undeveloped, for the sum of A$2 million.[9] The SA Government has also committed to an expenditure of A$1.7 million over a period of four years for the sanctuary’s establishment and its ongoing maintenance, with a likely completion in 2018.[9][10]

See also

Citations and references

Citations

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 DEWNR, 2014, page 7
  2. DEWNR, 2014, page 11
  3. DEWNR, 2014, pages 5 & 10
  4. DEWNR, 2014, page 19
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 DEWNR, 2014, page 17
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  8. GSA, 2014, page 154-155
  9. 9.0 9.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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References

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External links