
Mungalla: Healing the Herbert
Owners of Mungalla in the Herbert catchment are helping bring wetlands back to life
Healthy waterways underpin our lifestyles and livelihoods. When waterways thrive, so do we.
Volunteers for local landcare group Holloways Beach Coast Care have been busy reforesting riverbanks in the Barron delta to make them stronger in heavy rainfall events.
Decades of tree clearing for urban and agricultural development is worsening erosion during our wet seasons – and because of this we’re losing productive land and sending more sediment to the Great Barrier Reef.
That’s one of the reasons local landcare groups, powered by volunteers from right across our region, are working hard on revegetating river and creek banks.
Holloways Beach Coast Care has been restoring a site on Thomatis Creek, a tributary of the Barron River, for several years. Riverbank erosion was identified as a major issue there way back in the 1980s. It’s a classic example of the impact of clearing forests – big rainfall events flush much more quickly through the landscape, exposing the community to more flood risk and increasing erosion.
Sarah Sims, organiser of Holloways Beach Coast Care, says the site near Tamarind bend was cleared of native vegetation for sugarcane farming over 60 years ago.
“The site’s creek bank lost its ability to withstand wet season flows and has been eroding and receding ever since”, she says. “Without vegetation to shore it up and act as a buffer, farm land and soil would continue to be lost through erosion.”
“In 2017 the area was flagged as significant fish habitat, and an initial funding injection from the Department of Agriculture and Fisheries kickstarted the rehabilitation project. To date, we’ve planted nearly 7000 trees.”
Fluvial geomorphologist Michael Cheetham says river systems are dynamic and constantly moving.
“Channel deepening and widening are natural processes, but they are exacerbated by things that we do,’’ he says. “Riverbank erosion is almost always located where there’s no vegetation.”
Scientists have been predicting for decades that Thomatis Creek will eventually become the Barron River’s major river mouth. Rivers are constantly searching for the quickest and easiest route to the ocean and Thomatis Creek is three kilometres shorter than the main river and has a gradient advantage.
It has been shown that once tributaries carry 40 per cent of a river’s water, this triggers a migration process – and Thomatis Creek carried an estimated 35 per cent of the Barron River’s water in a 1980 study.
Sarah says the revegetated site stood up well to the floods after Cyclone Jasper in December.
“There have been some minor losses in the younger trees, but that’s to be expected in a flood event of that size. We were also pleased to see the riverbank hold strong. The trees are doing exactly what they’re supposed to do. If you look upstream at the erosion on the riverbank going through agricultural land where there’s no riparian vegetation, it clearly demonstrates why we need trees.”
Fast facts:
Owners of Mungalla in the Herbert catchment are helping bring wetlands back to life
Marine biologist Rickard Abom shares his experiences of the Great Barrier Reef
Martine joined the Wet Tropics Waterways team as a Science Technical Officer in early 2024. She is an environmental scientist and ecologist and has worked on water quality and aquatic ecology projects as a consultant and in private industry for over 20 years. She is using her experience in statistical programming and database development to develop new systems for the Report Card.
Louise joined Wet Tropics Waterways as Executive Officer in 2025.
Louise Hateley is an environmental scientist with over 20 years of experience in natural resource management, water quality, and catchment modelling across government, research, and community sectors. She has held senior scientific and project coordination roles with the Department of Natural Resources, Mines and Energy and Terrain NRM, leading projects focused on GBR catchment health, waterway management, and sustainable land use. With a record of published research, stakeholder engagement, and project delivery, Louise combines scientific expertise with practical leadership to drive initiatives that protect the Wet Tropics and support community collaboration.
Simon has over 30 years’ experience advocating for waterways across academia, government and the private sector. He started out in marine botany with a fascination for seagrass, mangroves and macroalgae, and has gone on to lead major environmental initiatives both in Australia and overseas. He has established report cards in eight countries.
Richard has been the Science Technical Officer for Wet Tropics Waterways since 2016. His role involves producing the annual results for the waterway health assessment of the wet tropics region using data from a wide range of sources, to present as scores and grades, as well as developing new indicators to address knowledge and monitoring gaps. He works in collaboration with technical staff at other regional report cards.
Richard has a background in freshwater ecology research projects and environmental assessments with CSIRO, University of Queensland, Queensland Government and as a consultant. For a long time he’s been interested in freshwater aquaculture and continues this interest through farming freshwater crayfish, alongside other farming activities.