The Australian lungfish,
Neoceratodus forsteri, exists as remnant natural populations in two rivers of south-east Queensland, Australia, and several translocated populations.
Lungfish habitats have been impacted by agriculture and forestry, alien plants and fish and by river impoundment and regulation
of flows. The species has been listed as vulnerable under Australian Commonwealth legislation. A proposal to construct Traveston
Crossing Dam on the free-flowing main channel of the upper Mary River could seriously threaten the lungfish. The dam can be
stopped by Commonwealth legislation if important populations of lungfish in the Mary River are likely to be significantly
impacted by the new dam. This paper assembles evidence that impoundment of the Mary River and regulation of river flows are
likely to decrease and fragment important lungfish populations, disrupt the breeding cycle, reduce juvenile recruitment, and
isolate and decrease habitat availability/quality to such an extent that the species is likely to decline. Proposed mitigation
strategies include fish transfer facilities, provision of flow releases from the dam (environmental flows) to sustain lungfish
habitat and breeding downstream, and translocation of hatchery-reared juvenile lungfish into suitable natural habitats. These
mitigation efforts may not be sufficient to secure the genetic diversity and long-term viability of lungfish populations in
the Mary River.
Keywords Lungfish - Threatening processes - Traveston Crossing Dam - Queensland