Scientists inspire the next generation of water managers

We know that seeing and experiencing is believing, so if we want to inspire future environmental water managers, we need to give them opportunities to learn and understand how our river ecosystems function.  In December 2020, six workshops were held at the Western Murray Land Improvement Group (WMLIG) centre in Barham to give primary and secondary students a hands-on experience of environmental science.  These workshops enabled students to learn about how  our rivers function directly from the scientists that study these important ecosystems.

A team of four Charles Sturt University scientists spent time with school students talking about, and sharing their river functioning expertise.  Shasha Liu talked about how environmental chemists study water quality, Roseanne Farrant talked about riverbank plants as food and habitat, Nicole McCasker shared her experience as a fish ecologist, and Robyn Watts was able to link the ecological aspects of rivers to their hydrology.   It was a great way for conversations and knowledge sharing about our rivers to occur between scientists, WMLIG staff and school students.

Students from Wakool Burraboi Public School looking at aquatic bugs

Approximately 150 students from Barham High School, Barham Public School, Moulamein Public School, and Wakool Burraboi Public School attended the workshop and, as the photos show, microscopes were at the ready to check out what had been scooped up from the local waterway. The facilities at WMLIG were ideal for the workshops, as there was plenty of room to have more than one activity set up at the same time.  The kids were also shown how to make their own ‘homemade’ wetland sampling gear, and were given some information sheets to help them hunt for aquatic bugs in river habitats nearby to their homes.

Each session included some short talks, as well as some activities so students could use microscopes from Charles Sturt University to look at aquatic bugs and plants, as well as preserved fish larvae. Students also used water quality meters to test water collected from the Murray River, a local wetland and farm dam.

Being able to take a microscopic look at some of the bugs and plants that live in our waterways enabled students to get that all important first-hand experience of why water quality, flow and caring for our rivers is so important.  The workshops were a great success and we hope we have inspired some future environmental water managers!

“Collaborating with CSU for this project has given Western Murray Land Improvement Group a wonderful opportunity to bring specialists and state of the art equipment to Barham, sharing amazing knowledge and allowing our local school children to take part in some very important learnings. It is vital to be able to provide these events to engage local youth. It sparks curiosity in younger minds and can pave the way for our future environmental scientists and carers, highlighting the fantastic work Universities play and showcasing what students can strive to achieve in their studies whilst nurturing our environment.”

Stacey Waylen, WMLIG

The Mid-Murray region contains diverse and rich natural environments. Its waterways provide water for domestic use, and support diverse agriculture, tourism and recreational activities and, Aboriginal cultural values and practices.

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Acknowledgment of Country

We acknowledge the First Nations communities of the Mid-Murray and pay respect to their Elders past and present. We acknowledge First Nations people as the Traditional Custodians of the land, water and sky country. We recognise the intrinsic connection of First Nations people to Country, and we value their enduring cultural, social, environmental, spiritual, and economic connection to the rivers, wetlands, and floodplains of the Murray-Darling Basin.

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