Inland Fisheries Service News

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Willow Warriors at work
Feb. 15, 2024

Willow Warriors working bee

Calling all current and new Willow Warriors, We will be back at out soon treating willows along the Tyenna River, this time starting at the weir near Mt Field National Park. We will meet on Friday 8th of March at 09.30 on Weir Road, near the Tyenna River (find a safe place to pull off...

The Hydro Tasmania logo
Feb. 13, 2024

Temporary closure of Butlers Gorge Road to Lake King William

Butlers Gorge Road to Lake King William will be temporarily closed 7 days a week to allow for road upgrade works. The road will be closed between 7am – 5pm each day from Saturday 17 February to Sunday 28 April. We will open the road over the March long weekend (9-11 March) and Easter.  ...

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Aerial view of Little Pine boat ramp
Feb. 13, 2024

Little Pine Lagoon boat ramp upgrade

The Little Pine Lagoon boat ramp upgrade is scheduled to commence on 26th February 2024 and completed at the end of March 2024. The boat ramp will be closed to the public during construction. An alternative launching site is available via the Little Pine Lagoon Road, in front of the shacks, approximately 500m to the...

The Hydro Tasmania logo
Jan. 29, 2024

Meadowbank Dam – Crest Gate 2 works starting!

Work on Meadowbank Dam’s second crest gate is underway. For more information about what we’re doing, visit www.connect.hydro.com.au. For safety reasons, Lake Meadowbank will be lowered 2 metres below its usual level from 30 January 2024. Later this year (timing TBD), the lake will be lowered a further 4 metres while we test the newly...

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Analysis of a skin swab from pouched lamprey collected from the Meadowbank Dam elver/lamprey trap
Jan. 24, 2024

Lamprey disease investigation: baseline survey in Tasmania

Kate Hutson (Cawthron Institute, Aotearoa|New Zealand) and the Inland Fisheries Service, Tasmania are working together to better understand the diseases of the pouched lamprey, Geotria australis, as part of a New Zealand based research programme, Emerging Aquatic Diseases. In New Zealand, the pouched lamprey (kanakana) are susceptible to “lamprey reddening syndrome” which typically causes skin...