Lake Muir Nature Reserve
Lake Muir Nature Reserve is a protected area in Western Australia. It encompasses Lake Muir and several smaller lakes and wetlands. It is an important refuge for water birds, and home to several rare plants and plant communities.
Geography
The reserve is located in the South West region, in the shires of Manjimup and Cranbook, 55 km south east of Manjimup.The lakes and swamps form a partly-interconnected system. They vary in size, with Lake Muir the largest. The lakes and swamps also vary in salinity, from freshwater to saline, and include both seasonal and permanent wetlands on peat and inorganic substrates.
Muir Highway passes through the northern end of the reserve, north of Lake Muir. Lake Muir Observatory is located off the highway at the north end of the lake. It has an observatory and 110-metre boardwalk for viewing the lake along with shelter, picnic tables, and toilets, and is a popular rest stop for travelers.
The reserve is bounded on the south by Lake Muir National Park.
Flora and fauna
The reserve protects several wetland plant communities which are now rare outside coastal Southwest Australia. The swamps are mostly dominated by sedges and shrubs, and the reserve includes the largest natural sedgelands in Western Australia. The swamps are home to three species of nationally vulnerable orchids – Harrington's spider orchid, Christine's spider orchid, and the tall donkey orchid.It is also the location of a localized Kunzea species Kunzea micrantha.
The open lakes are used for moulting by thousands of Australian shelduck, and provide a drought refuge for tens of thousands of ducks and other water birds, including Australian little bittern, spotless crake, black swan, and eurasian coot. The swamps support a significant population of Australasian bittern.
Vulnerable fauna present in the reserve include Balston's pygmy perch, Muir's corella, forest red-tailed black cockatoo, chuditch, numbat, woylie, and quokka.