Location: 12 sites along Gold Creek, Moggill Creek, Gap Creek, Mackay Brook
Type: Monthly Creek Monitoring
Organiser: Adrian Webb
Contact: 3374 1407 or 0412 672 283 Email: [email protected]
Monthly Creek Monitoring – 27th March 15
Location: 12 sites along Gold Creek, Moggill Creek and Mackay Brook
Type: Creek Monitoring
Organiser: Adrian Webb
Contact: 3374 1407 or 0412 672 283 or email [email protected]
Monthly Creek Monitoring – 26th June 15
Location: 12 sites along Gold Creek, Moggill Creek, Gap Creek, Mackay Brook
Type: Monthly Creek Monitoring
Organiser: Adrian Webb
Contact: 3774 1407 or 0412 672 283 Email: [email protected]
Monthly Creek Monitoring – 25th Sep 15
Location: 12 sites along Gold Creek, Moggill Creek, Gap Creek, Mackay Brook
Type: Monthly Creek Monitoring
Organiser: Adrian Webb
Contact: 3374 1407 or 0412 672 283 Email: [email protected]
Monthly Creek Monitoring – 24th Jul 15
Location: 12 sites along Gold Creek, Moggill Creek, Gap Creek, Mackay Brook
Type: Monthly Creek Monitoring
Organiser: Adrian Webb
Contact: 3374 1407 or 0412 672 283 Email: [email protected]
Tuckett Park Flood Story
There were surprisingly few losses from flood damage in the Tuckett Park area, despite the fact that some of our plantings on the lower banks in the area were 2-3m under water!
We have stopped spraying weedkiller on the grass, so the roots of the grass prevent erosion and the long grass slows the water in a flood. Before, during and after flood photos tell the story.
BEFORE
DURING

AFTER

Lord Mayors Australia Day Awards 2015
Congratulations are in order! MCCG was awarded a 2015 Lord Mayor’s
Australia Day Green Heart Award – Organisation.

The Award recognises the work done by the Group engaging
with local property owners to assist with land rehabilitation, working with
schools in the Catchment, conducting wildlife surveys and monitoring the health
of its waterways.
MCCG Public Meeting 2019
Location: Brookfield Hall
Type: Event
Organiser: Dale Borgelt
Contact: [email protected]
This event will feature Tamielle Blunt giving a presentation on our popular annual Platypus surveys.
MCCG AGM 2015
Location: Brookfield Hall
Type: Event
Organiser: Dale Borgelt
Contact:
Aquatic Weeds Identification Workshop
Dangerous aquatic weeds occur in our catchment. MCCG supported by Brisbane City Council have run a successful identification workshop with landholders.
Of the 20 participants originally accepted 14 took part. Phil Moran provided an excellent range of aquatic plants concentrating on those that are known to occur in Moggill and Pullen Pullen catchments and others that are present in SEQ catchments and pose considerable threat to aquatic ecosystems if they become established. Phil gave detailed information on the different weeds including case studies in SEQ as well as nationally. He provided a range of ID sheets and emphasised the differences in the plants and the implications when it comes to management methods. The resource material provided is extremely useful, for field identification of weeds.
The hands-on identification training was provided through a range of aquatic weeds and native aquatics that are not considered threats. These were displayed in tubs and we were encouraged to handle and look at them closely. Several of the specimens were collected from local sites in the catchment.
A major benefit from the workshop is the increased knowledge of the Moggill and the Pullen Pullen participants in identification of aquatic weeds and the wider knowledge of the threats posed by them. An important point made at the workshop was that a wide range of aquatic weeds considered serious threats to creek health, do occur in our catchments. Another is that most of them are very difficult to destroy or manage. Subsequent to the workshop it has become quite clear that more needs to be done to encourage and support landholders in the management of their dams / turkey’s nests so that infestations are treated on farm and do not enter the creek systems. Currently Brian Hacker an MCCG member does provide information on aquatic weed management to landholders when the opportunity arises through his property visits. Aquatic weeds that have been reported as occurring in our creeks or drainage lines over the last 5 years include: Salvinia, Sagittarius, Senegal tea, Kidneyleaf mud- plantain, Glushweed, Parrot’s feather. Of these, the Declared Class 1 weeds which must be reported to Biosecurity Queensland are Senegal tea, Glushweed.
Adrian Webb ([email protected])
