Chapter 2 - Background
Introduction
2.1
Gulf St Vincent is a valuable asset to South
Australia. It supports an abundant aquatic system, provides an important sea
link to other cities, produces fish and seafood and provides the basis for a
wide range of recreational activities including attractive beaches and coastal
scenery.
2.2
Gulf St Vincent is the smaller of the two gulfs
in South Australia. Adelaide, a city of approximately 1 million people, is
located on the eastern side of the Gulf and it is this proximity to major urban
development which is responsible for many of the most pressing problems facing
Gulf St Vincent today. The Gulf is a multi-use area and as such, there are
increasing pressures between its various users for resources. The most
significant marine areas under threat in South Australia are in Gulf St Vincent
and, in particular, they are in the Adelaide Metropolitan Coastal Waters Zone.
2.3
Along with providing economic and recreational
bounty, the Gulf gives less tangible benefits. Since European settlement it has
been treated as a “free good” providing a dump for sewage effluent and sludge,
industrial effluent, urban runoff, dredging material, and other unwanted
material. No information is available on the cost of this pollution to the
marine environment from loss of fisheries production, effects on biodiversity,
nuisance and loss of amenity and access.[1]
It is the taxpayers today however, who are paying for the “free good” of the
past. It is obvious that if the degradation is not addressed today it will be
future generations who will be paying for a loss of amenity, a loss of
resources and for further remedial works.
Description
2.4
The Gulf is approximately 70 km wide from east
to west and approximately 160 km long from north to south. It has approximately
350 km of coastline. It connects to the Southern Ocean by Investigator Strait
to the south-west, and by Backstairs Passage to the south. It is bounded on the
south-east by the Fleurieu Peninsula and on the west by Yorke Peninsula.
Kangaroo Island lies at the mouth of the Gulf and acts as a barrier between
Gulf waters and the open ocean. Kangaroo Island ensures that it takes 80-100
days to completely flush through.
2.5
As a result, this characteristic has
implications for the Gulf in the dilution of pollutants as it takes longer for
them to disperse. Twice a month the Gulf can experience dodge tides where tidal
movement almost ceases. When these occur there is less dilution and dispersion
of pollutants.
2.6
The Gulf is highly saline with salinity
increasing towards its head at the northern end. As a consequence it behaves as
an inverse, or reverse, estuary which is rather uncommon. Inverse estuaries
usually occur in arid areas that do not have sufficient fresh-water inflow, or
sufficient sea-water flushing, to compensate for evaporation.[2]
2.7
There is a high degree of variability over
various parameters across the Gulf. There can be up to a 12°C temperature
difference throughout the Gulf waters and salinities vary from 35.5 parts per
thousand (ppt) to 42.0 ppt.[3]
The Gulf is relatively shallow and its sheltered nature results in low to very
low wave regimes. Tidal currents carry fine suspended sediments that settle out
in the upper reaches creating large sediment basins. Windwaves rather than
currents are the main modifying factor.[4]
The Gulf has a diversity of areas and adverse impacts vary across its entirety.
2.8
South Australian waters are naturally low in
nutrients due to low levels of runoff from the land because of the arid nature
of the region, as well as the aged, nutrient-poor soils. The impact of nutrient
rich stormwater runoff as well as wastewater from sewage treatment plants has
therefore had a marked impact on Gulf waters.
2.9
Outside of the Adelaide metropolitan area, small
towns are situated around the Gulf. Many of these towns are popular tourist
destinations and their populations can dramatically increase in the tourist
season. Intensive farming activities occur around Dublin and broad acre farming
with low populations around the Inkerman area.
2.10
The Yorke Peninsula borders the western side of
the Gulf. This region comprises micro to small communities, some of which
consist of mainly holiday and retirement shacks, and a sparsely populated
farming community. Industry sectors include: tourism and hospitality, agribusiness,
information technology, aquaculture and light industries. Salt production takes
place at Price.
2.11
At Port Wakefield, at the northern end of the
Gulf, is a Proof and Experimental Establishment. This facility tests locally
and overseas manufactured ammunition, fuses, projectiles and gun components
under simulated operational conditions. Shells and projectiles are extracted
from the tidal offshore area at low tide after firing for testing and
evaluation. Neither State nor Local Government has jurisidiction over the area
as it is run by the Defence Estate Organisation – South Australia, which has a
landlord function for the Federal Department of Defence.
2.12
The total land holding of the Establishment is
currently 5000 hectares. A designated prohibited area also extends seaward to
the low water mark, encompassing a further area of approximately 4600 hectares.
As such, the area has not been subject to development pressures as have other
areas bordering the Gulf. Because access is denied to it, it may provide valuable
baseline data about the state of the Gulf.
2.13
Gulf St Vincent has a diverse range of habitats
and globally significant regions for temperate biodiversity, exhibiting very
high levels of endemism - or uniqueness of species - relative to the southern
temperate coastline of Australia. The Southern temperate coastline of Australia
itself has an endemism of over 85% compared with 15% in tropical areas such as
the Great Barrier Reef.[5]
2.14
Gulf St Vincent contains some of the most
extensive areas of temperate mangrove forests (20 000 hectares) and seagrass
meadows in Australia. These habitats are of considerable ecological and
economic importance. Other habitats include temperate reef systems, samphire,
saltmarsh, tidal flats, stranded shell beach ridges and sand beach ridges.
There are important breeding areas for waterbirds.
2.15
Dense seagrass areas exist in the Gulf from
Aldinga Bay to Yankalilla, some distance off the metropolitan coast and on the
eastern side of the upper Gulf. Only sparse seagrass exists on the western side
of the upper Gulf. The inner Metropolitan Coast is typified by bare sand.[6]
2.16
A series of low profile platform reefs on the
West Coast and lower Gulf and around Port Noarlunga to Aldinga Beach are
important nursery areas for a variety of fish and are food sources for other
marine life, including rock lobsters and abalone. There is also a number of
placed artificial reefs and a series of shipwrecks.
Uses of the Gulf
Shipping and boating
2.17
The Gulf accommodates the Port of Adelaide which
comprises an inner and an outer harbour with more than 20 wharves to cater for
container ships. There are also three regional ports on the Gulf as well as an
additional two situated on the north-eastern side of Kangaroo Island. Along
with commercial shipping, the Gulf is used for recreational boating. More than
32 000 recreational boats, not including small motorless boats, use Gulf
waters. The infrastructure required to house these craft, including sheltered
harbours and jetties, as well as litter, toilets and antifoulant paints, have
an impact on the Gulf.
Dredging
2.18
Periodic dredging of the Port Adelaide River
shipping channel is necessary to maintain the channel. Spoil is dumped in the
Gulf. As part of the Coast Protection Board’s beach replenishment program, sand
is taken from parts of the Gulf and used to replace sand eroded from
metropolitan beaches.
Fishing and aquaculture
2.19
Gulf St Vincent supports commercial and
recreational fishing. In fact, in some areas, notably metropolitan Adelaide,
the recreational share of the total catch is higher than the commercial share,
although the recreational catch rate is not monitored to the same extent as is
the commercial catch rate. There are 216 species of fish recorded for the Gulf
and of these, 14 are important commercial species. The Gulf supports a Western
King Prawn fishery, a blue crab fishery as well as various scale fish fisheries
and some rock lobster activity.
2.20
Some aquaculture, mainly oyster and abalone,
also takes place in the Gulf. The waters on the western side of the Gulf are
more conducive to aquaculture than those on the eastern side because the
western side has relatively clean waters. The northern areas of the Gulf are
considered suitable only for cultivation of some species of algae.[7] There is also potential for
aquaculture in the deeper waters of the Gulf.[8]
Salt Production
2.21
750 000 tonnes of salt is produced at Dry Creek
per year and 200 000 tonnes is produced at Price per year.[9]
Tourism and recreation
2.22
Gulf waters are used by a significant proportion
of the population for a range of activities such as swimming, boating,
yachting, scuba diving, sailboarding windsurfing and relaxing.
Heritage
2.23
Gulf St Vincent has many maritime heritage sites
including shipwrecks, jetties, wharves and historic buildings. There are also
sites of great Aboriginal significance, including the middens and fish traps of
the Narrunga people along the western coast of Gulf St Vincent.
Barker Inlet/Port Adelaide River[10]
2.24
The Barker Inlet and Port River surrounds are
part of the metropolitan area of the Gulf. The area forms the largest tidal
inlet in Gulf St Vincent and is an important nursery and feeding area for
commercial and recreational fish species. Despite being home to a commercial
shipping terminal, various industries and two wastewater treatment plant
outfalls, the area has been identified as being of the very highest
significance in ecological and economic terms to the State.[11]
2.25
The Barker Inlet shoreline has wide tidal mud
flats and an extensive belt of mangroves fringing the samphire salt flats and
low-lying dunes of the coastal plain. Torrens Island and Garden Island, split
by Angas Inlet, lie within the Barker Inlet. Several creeks feed into the Inlet
and extensive salt evaporation ponds occur adjacent to most of the mangrove and
samphire areas.[12]
2.26
The Port River is subjected to a range of
competing uses. It has provided Adelaide and South Australia with major port
facilities since the early days of settlement. The North West region of
Adelaide has intensive industrial and commercial land use with an estimated
8000 business premises. This is approximately half of metropolitan Adelaide’s
industry.[13]
There is a legacy of contaminated land and contaminated groundwater in some
areas.
2.27
The Port River and the Barker and Angus Inlets
are important feeding and nursery areas for many species of aquatic animals,
including migratory birds, dolphins, black swans and many fish species.
Industrial uses in the area have included coal handling facilities, the use of
water for cooling in electricity generating plants, cement works, a sugar
refinery, boat building facilities, major fuel storage depots, a major sewage
treatment plant, chemical plants and rubbish dumps.[14]
Reserves
2.28
In 1971, South Australia was the first
Australian state to legislate for marine protected areas. By 1995, however,
only 1.5% of the State’s waters were listed[15]
although the proclamation of the Great Australian Bight Marine Park improved
the situation in 1996.
2.29
Primary responsibility for the protection of
aquatic habitats lies with the Fisheries Act 1982 (SA) but marine
protected areas may also be declared under the National Parks and Wildlife
Act 1972 (SA) and the Historic Shipwrecks Act 1981 (SA). Listed
marine reserves under the Fisheries Act in Gulf St Vincent are: Aldinga Reef,
Barker Inlet, St Kilda, Port Noarlunga-Onkaparinga Estuary, St Kilda-Chapman
Creek and Troubridge Hill.
2.30
Conservation Park listings are Port Gawler
Marine Park and Troubridge Island Conservation Park. The Clinton Conservation
Park is situated at the head of the Gulf and is listed on the Register of the
National Estate. It represents the only significant natural mangrove/samphire
community left in the region. The northern tip of Torrens Island is also a
Conservation Park.
2.31
Gleesons Landing is the only marine sanctuary
and is for pilchard protection. Thirteen netting closures exist in the Gulf
region. They have not been formally recognised as Marine Protected Areas. They
are: Edithburgh, Coobowie, Stansbury, Price, Port Wakefield, Port Adelaide,
Outer Harbor and metropolitan beaches, Patawalonga Lake, Onkaparinga River,
Parsons Beach, Waitpinga Beach, Hindmarsh and Inman Rivers.[16]
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