 Kyra Edwards and Emma Martin watch on as Nyaburu Watson and David
Morgan tag a Sawfish
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 (Left) David Morgan (Murdoch Uni), Kimberley Watson, Hugh Wallace
Smith and TJ Butt (Yiriman) netting the river.
Photos: Simon Vissor
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The Barrage at Camballin is the only man-made structure on the main
channel of the Fitzroy River and was built about 40 years ago to
move water into Snake Creek to water crops. The crops failed but
the Barrage stayed and has not been working properly since then.
In July of this year Nyikina-Mangala Traditional Owners along with
Murdoch University Fish Biologists, Kimberley Land Council (KLC),
Land & Sea Unit staff and Yiriman Project staff undertook the
last research field trip to look at the effects of the Barrage on
the flow of fish up and down the Fitzroy River.
This project will help Traditional Owners, government and
scientists work out if the Barrage needs a fish passage on it to
let fish swim over it in the dry season. The group spent three days
at the Camballin Barrage netting with three different size nets
above and below the Barrage.
The netting showed that there is a big difference in the types of
fish found. The research showed that
freshwater sawfish and other important fish, including bull sharks
and other fish that breed in the sea are often trapped below the
Barrage for up to 10 months of the year, until the wet comes.
It’s only in the wet that they can move up or down stream
properly, if the wet is a good one.
The Barrage project linked in strongly with another project that
Traditional Owners, the fish biologists, Kimberley Language
Resource Centre (KLRC) and Kimberley Land Council had done on the
cultural values and biological importance of the freshwater
sawfish, which scientists call
Pristis microdon
in Latin.
The Fitzroy River is the last place in the world where you can find
good numbers of freshwater sawfish. The fish biologists were happy
to find out different things about the sawfish’s body, what
it likes to eat and how old it is.
But one of their big findings was that freshwater sawfish give
birth to their young at the mouth of the Fitzroy and then the young
ones use the Fitzroy to grow for the next four to five years or
until they become adults at more than 2 metres. They then they head
back to the sea where they grow to up to 7 metres long. This means
that the sawfish is both a freshwater and saltwater fish and that
those caught in the Fitzroy are juveniles and haven’t had
young themselves yet.
Nyikina-Mangala, Bunuba, Gooniyandi and Walmajarri Traditional
Owners were happy to be involved in the project for recording
language names and uses of the sawfish. It was a good opportunity
for everyone to get back out on to country so that stories and
cultural knowledge could be exchanged and passed down.
These projects are good for both scientists and Traditional Owners
because very different types of knowledge about the sawfish and
country are shared, but all cultural knowledge remains the property
of Traditional Owners.
The Barrage Project was funded by the Land and Water Australia
Small Grants project and the sawfish project was funded by WWF with
in-kind contributions from KLC, KLRC, Yiriman Youth Project and
Murdoch University Fish Group.
Thank you to both of these funding bodies for the support you have
provided and a special thanks to the fish biologists for your
commitment to also meeting the agenda of Traditional Owners in your
research.
— Jean Fenton