OH come on...wyvenhoe being overtopped.......another 6 hours of what rain and where........ nothing more than a throw away line......As I said before Wyvenhoe has not even been flowing on the spillway.
There are lots of people keen to beat the environmental catastrophy drum.........sorry, I wont have it.
As far as nutrients...there is a big difference between low water flows and highly active and disolved neutrients and high water flows and the sort of neutrients that come from mud and decomposing vegitation.
People talk about the poor current water quality in our rivers.....OH give me a break....the Brisbane River has not been in as good shape for over 50 years........in the 60's and 70s prior to the the 74 flood it was a stinking fetid hole......ya had factories off all sorts dumping, all sorts of untreated crap into the river industrial estates right down to the river edge, practicaly non-existent sewage treatment and constant dredging.
Remember too back in the 60's & 70's farmers were not into the carefull or reduced application of firtilisers or pesticieds.... they just used heaps......and there were all sorts of nasty chemicals being used that are no longer legal
In 74 ya had hundreds of acres in the brisbane river catchment under farmland that is now under nice sealed residential developments...and close to the river......so don't give me there is more silt today because of the development...its only unprovable speculation...if there is more silt this flood it is simply because of the greater waterflows......arround twice the 74 floods
The brisbane river always was and always will be a heavily silted river under strong inflows.......where do ya think all the sand that makes up the barrier islands ( moreton and stradbroke)and keeps the bay so shallow comes from.
I fell in the river in the toowong reach back in the late eighties while working on a boat.......river not in flood or any recent heavy rains.....I can tell you the water was gritty in my teeth.
Our moreton bay as we see it today is built on the silt droped out of the costal rivers
If ya want to get some idea of the silt that comes out of the brisbane river.......before white settlmemt much of the brisbane river was as shallow as 6 feet..as shipping was braught futher and further up the river it was dredged deeper and deeper first 20 then 30 feet deep up as far as the william jolly bridge.........lots of that silt was droped in the bay....... but lots of it was used for reclaim.........have alook at your referdex......everthing on the river side of kingsford smith drive from bretts wharf/ Race Course rd to the mouth is reclaim, most of it from constant dredging of silt to keep the river open for navigation.
Until the nineties, most of the sand and gravel for Brisbane came out of the river
Siltation deposits from one off large inflows like floods have a very different effect to the constant siltation that comes from continuous dredging, and low flow washdown......
The flood events are one off events and the evironment will soon recover.....the very banks that the seagrass grows on come from river sediment... creatures like yabbies and worms ( the bottom of the food chain) live on the washed down low value neutrients that come from decaying plant and animal matter in the mud.
As for algal blooms......if you recon there were no algal blooms prior to 74...dream on.
Besides the main triggers for algal blooms are stillness and water temperature....they do occur in nature......they just seem so nasty to us because they impose themselves on our human activities and our visual response.
Yeh disolved neutrients make them very much worse...... but I don't think you can associate algal blooms with high flow events...in fact these very high flow events are more likley to mitigate such things..... diluting and carrying away those nasty eliments that otherwise would enter our waterways in much more concentrated form where they would stay in the river systems far far longer.
Remember there are two common occurances of oysters...... often the same spicies......"rock oysters" and " dredge oysters"......dredge oysters live partialy burried in sand or mud.........
As far as the relationship between sand/ slit and coral........there will always be some association between sand and coral......how many small islands started out as coral outcrops, gathered sand and became islands......( hell look at green, st helena and mud) Coral has been dealing with sand and silt for thousands of years......I am sure it can manage a bit of a flood every 30 years or so.
It is the slow dribbling of human life that damages our marine environment... not the ripping cleansing flow of nature.
Remember nature always has a long term view....it is a mistake to try and impose our short term visualy motivated values on the marine environment.
This is the hipocracy of manny greenies, they look at and measure the environment by their feeble, inconsistent short term human life.
cheers
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