Freshwater is a vital resource in Australia, and its availability is highly variable in semi-arid and arid. Rapidly expanding water resource development in the Murray Darling Basin (MDB) has impacted natural flow regimes and the ecological integrity of many dryland rivers and their large floodplain wetlands. Efforts to manage and conserve the surface waters of rivers in the MDB are hampered by limited scientific data regarding historical and contemporary flow and inundation patterns and of responses of flora and fauna to the high natural variability of flow regimes that typify the lowland-dryland rivers.
Melrose, R. (2010). Inundation patterns and vegetation responses in the Paroo and Warrego catchments using multi-temporal Radar remote sensing.In: Proceedings of the 16thBiennial Conference of the Australian Rangeland Society, Bourke (Eds D.J. Eldridge and C. Waters) (Australian Rangeland Society: Perth).
Full-text publications from the Australian Rangelands Society (ARS) Biennial Conference Proceedings (1997-), Rangeland Journal (ARS/CSIRO; 1976-), plus videos and other resources about the rangelands of Australia.