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Featured researches published by Sa Hardie.


Environmental Biology of Fishes | 2004

Threatened fishes of the world: Galaxias auratus Johnston, 1883 (Galaxiidae)

Sa Hardie; Leon A. Barmuta; R. W. G. White

Common name: Golden galaxias. Conservation status: Rare – (Tasmanian Threatened Species Protection Act 1995); Endangered – ASFB (2003). Identification: D 7–10, A 11–12, P 14–18, vertebral count 53–56 (McDowall & Frankenberg 1981). Small scaleless salmoniform fish, maximum size: 240 mm TFL, 130 g (Hardie 2003). Colouration: golden to olive-green on dorsal surface and sides, silvery-grey on ventral surface. Back and sides are covered with round to oval black spots (McDowall & Frankenberg 1981). Drawing by Carol Kroger in Fulton (1990).


Marine and Freshwater Research | 2013

Hydrological manipulation to assist spawning of a threatened galaxiid fish in a highland lake system

Sa Hardie

Hydrological alterations threaten freshwater fishes globally, with infrastructure-related modification of inland waterways (e.g. dams, water diversions) having profound impacts on many species. Adapting existing water-management systems can provide opportunities for undertaking hydrological manipulations to assist management of threatened fishes. The present study conducted two hydrological manipulations in an impounded highland lake system in Tasmania, Australia, under differing hydrological conditions in 2007 and 2009, to assist recovery of an endemic species, Galaxias auratus, following a prolonged drought. Monitoring at egg, larvae, juvenile and adult life stages revealed a positive response by G. auratus in Lake Crescent (recipient of water release), with no adverse impact on the species in Lake Sorell (source of water release). In both years, reproductive constraints imposed by water level-related availability of sediment-free rocky substrata delayed spawning (~1 month) of G. auratus in Lake Crescent. Despite this, spawning and recruitment occurred in 2007 (drought year) and 2009 (drought-breaking year), and the 2007 manipulation resulted in a two-fold increase in the seasonal density of larvae in Lake Crescent and an abundant cohort of YOY fish. Given knowledge of life histories and eco-hydrological relationships, manipulating (or re-instating) hydrologic conditions is a powerful tool for assisting recovery of threatened lacustrine fishes.


Environmental Management | 2018

Compounding Effects of Agricultural Land Use and Water Use in Free-Flowing Rivers: Confounding Issues for Environmental Flows

Sa Hardie; Chris J. Bobbi

Defining the ecological impacts of water extraction from free-flowing river systems in altered landscapes is challenging as multiple stressors (e.g., flow regime alteration, increased sedimentation) may have simultaneous effects and attributing causality is problematic. This multiple-stressor context has been acknowledged in environmental flows science, but is often neglected when it comes to examining flow-ecology relationships, and setting and implementing environmental flows. We examined the impacts of land and water use on rivers in the upper Ringarooma River catchment in Tasmania (south-east Australia), which contains intensively irrigated agriculture, to support implementation of a water management plan. Temporal and spatial and trends in river condition were assessed using benthic macroinvertebrates as bioindicators. Relationships between macroinvertebrate community structure and environmental variables were examined using univariate and multivariate analyses, focusing on the impacts of agricultural land use and water use. Structural changes in macroinvertebrate communities in rivers in the catchment indicated temporal and spatial declines in the ecological condition of some stretches of river associated with agricultural land and water use. Moreover, water extraction appeared to exacerbate impairment associated with agricultural land use (e.g., reduced macroinvertebrate density, more flow-avoiding taxa). The findings of our catchment-specific bioassessments will underpin decision-making during the implementation of the Ringarooma water management plan, and highlight the need to consider compounding impacts of land and water use in environmental flows and water planning in agricultural landscapes.


Hydrobiologia | 2006

Comparison of day and night fyke netting, electrofishing and snorkelling for monitoring a population of the threatened golden galaxias ( Galaxias auratus )

Sa Hardie; Leon A. Barmuta; R. W. G. White


Aquatic Conservation-marine and Freshwater Ecosystems | 2006

Status of galaxiid fishes in Tasmania, Australia: Conservation listings, threats and management issues

Sa Hardie; Jean E. Jackson; Leon A. Barmuta; R. W. G. White


Journal of Fish Biology | 2007

Reproductive biology of the threatened golden galaxias Galaxias auratus Johnston and the influence of lake hydrology

Sa Hardie; R. W. G. White; Leon A. Barmuta


Freshwater Biology | 2014

The ecology of rivers with contrasting flow regimes: identifying indicators for setting environmental flows

Danielle M. Warfe; Sa Hardie; Adam R. Uytendaal; Chris J. Bobbi; Leon A. Barmuta


River Research and Applications | 2014

Implementing environmental flows in semi-regulated and unregulated rivers using a flexible framework: case studies from Tasmania, Australia

Chris J. Bobbi; Danielle M. Warfe; Sa Hardie


Fish and Fisheries | 2016

Enhancing conservation of Australian freshwater ecosystems: identification of freshwater flagship fishes and relevant target audiences

Brendan C. Ebner; D.L. Morgan; Adam Kerezsy; Sa Hardie; S. Beatty; Jamie Seymour; James A. Donaldson; Simon Linke; Stirling C. Peverell; David A. Roberts; Thomas Espinoza; Nadine Marshall; Frederieke J. Kroon; Damien Burrows; Ryan R. J. McAllister


Archive | 2012

Macroinvertebrate and water quality responses to low flows in Tasmanian rivers

Sa Hardie; Chris J. Bobbi; Leon A. Barmuta

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Bradley James Pusey

University of Western Australia

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