Media Releases
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The North Central Catchment Management Authority (CMA) is seeking images to commemorate the centenary of the 1909 floods throughout this region.
Over 60 community members from Torrumbarry to Koondrook joined representatives from the North Central Catchment Management Authority (CMA), the Murray-Darling Freshwater Research Centre, Department of Primary Industries and Goulburn-Murray Water at a Gunbower Creek community event held in Cohuna recently.
More than fifty Waterwatch community volunteers from across the North Central Victoria region participated in the annual Victorian Waterwatch Quality Assurance/Quality Control (QAQC) program last week. The program provides an opportunity for Waterwatch volunteers to review and improve their monitoring techniques.
Following a reduction in support to Landcare as a result of changes in Australian Government funding priorities, the North Central Catchment Management Authority (CMA) is seeking to support Landcare into the future by aiding in the formation of Landcare networks across the North Central CMA region.
Works are underway to remove Desert Ash, Boxthorn, Spiny Rush and other weeds from the Avoca River, an important environmental asset in North Central Victoria. The removal and control of these weeds is part of the North Central Catchment Management Authority’s (CMA) Avoca Reach 7 River Health project.
Local community members are invited to attend a free event in Cohuna on 22 July to hear about fish monitoring results from Gunbower Creek and provide local knowledge.
Have your say on local waterways, in world-first research looking at the social importance of lakes, rivers, creeks, wetlands and estuaries.
The North Central Catchment Management Authority’s (CMA) current Board concludes its three-year term at the end of the month with an impressive list of achievements
The North Central Catchment Management Authority (CMA) in conjunction with the Victorian Gorse Taskforce held a World Environment Day event on Friday 5 June focussing on enhancing river health in the upper Loddon and Campaspe catchments.
For the first time, the North Central Catchment Management Authority’s (CMA) $2.5 million Drought Employment Program (DEP) employed 12 Indigenous men from the Baraparapa community to undertake site assessments along the Loddon River, from Appin South to Kerang.
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