Salinity Solutions - New South Wales - NSW DIPNR  
 






NSW Department of Natural Resources

Mapping and modelling

Mapping

DNR is producing a range of data sets and mapping products that are relevant to salinity management, including maps of:

  • Native vegetation
  • Soil
  • Land use
  • Recharge and run-off
  • Potential discharge areas
  • Salt outbreak areas, and
  • Groundwater flow systems.

These maps are derived using direct field observations and data modelling techniques.

The vegetation maps and accompanying scientific reports are available on-line at www.dnr.nsw.gov.au/vegetation/index.shtml . Other information can be accessed from the Community Access to Natural Resources Information (CANRI) website, which aims to bring together key environmental information from NSW Government agencies and other organisations.

Modelling

Modelling is used to fill information gaps where data is limited or to add value to data by combining it in ways that represent processes that are otherwise not directly mappable. For example, it is not possible to directly map the extent of salinisation in 2050, but by using a model that represents the processes of dryland salinisation, it is possible to extrapolate from existing spatial data to make predictions about future condition.

To manage salinity in a catchment we need to know:
  1. Where and how much salt is stored in the landscape,
  2. How salt and water moves in the landscape,
  3. How the geology and structure of the landscape contributes to the problem,
  4. What affects the rate of movement of salt, and
  5. How changing something in one location affects the rest of the catchment or basin.

Computer based modelling tools also support natural resource management by enabling different management options to be explored and evaluated, or to allow data to be extrapolated in time and space when limited data is available.

DNR has a suite of models that enable us to:
  • evaluate where salinity is currently occurring in the landscape and where it might occur in the future,
  • predict the impacts of land use changes on run-off, salt loads and salinities from catchments to streams, and
  • evaluate the contributions of these changes to meeting within valley and end-of-valley targets.

The models provide information needed by Catchment Management Authorities to develop target-based management strategies. They provide practical scientific and technical support on biophysical aspects of salinity management for property and catchment planning. This includes providing scientific and technical support to the setting, reviewing and auditing of end-of-valley and within valley targets, and to the development and accreditation of Catchment Action Plans, and associated market-based solutions to salinity.

The models will collectively provide information at the three scales relevant to implementing salinity management in NSW, which are:
  1. The property or farm scale,
  2. The scale of catchments up to about 2,000 km2 in area, and
  3. The river basin scale.

At the property scale the main modelling tool being adopted by the Department is PERFECT, which is a well established tool for modelling recharge and the impacts of vegetation changes on recharge, at a given location.

The catchment scale-modelling tool is CATSALT. CATSALT was developed by DNR and it is the only modelling tool currently available in Australia that can predict the effects of land-use changes on streamflows, in-stream salinities and salt loads at catchment scale. It is an "umbrella" model in that it uses outputs from other models such as FLAG and SMAR to produce its results.

Results from CATSALT are then used as input to other models, such as IQQM, to evaluate cumulative impacts from multiple catchments and contributions to meeting within-valley and end-of-valley targets. IQQM was developed to manage water access and water sharing arrangements within catchments, but is currently being further developed to estimate the impacts of land use changes on end-of-valley targets.

Collaborative links have been formed with other agencies and organisations such as the CRC for Catchment Hydrology and CSIRO to improve integration and communication between models, as well as expand the scope of the models. The testing and validation of DNR models has involved peer review by scientists from other organisations and international research institutes.

References and resources

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