Western District Lakes
The Western District Lakes of Victoria, in the Western District of Victoria, south-eastern Australia, were recognised on 15 December 1982 as wetlands of international importance by listing under the Ramsar Convention, as Ramsar site no.268.
Description
The site comprises nine lakes with a combined area of, varying in depth and salinity from fresh water to hypersaline. They include State Wildlife Reserves and Lake Reserves and serve as drought refuges for tens of thousands of waterbirds. Several threatened plants occur within the site, including the endangered Lepidium ashersonii. The lakes are used for various purposes, including recreational fishing and duck hunting as well as grazing, commercial fishing, and wastewater disposal. The lakes lie in a basaltic grassland landscape at an altitude of above sea level. Average annual rainfall is. Lakes included in the site are:- Lake Beeac; hypersaline;
- Lake Bookar;
- Lake Colongulac; saline;
- Lake Corangamite; hypersaline;
- Lake Cundare; hypersaline;
- Lake Gnarpurt; saline;
- Lake Milangil; saline;
- Lake Murdeduke; saline;
- Lake Terangpom; fresh;
Birds
The Ramsar-listed lakes, along with other nearby lakes have been identified by BirdLife International as a Important Bird Area because they support over 1% of the world populations of Australian shelducks, chestnut teals and banded stilts and irregularly support over 1% of the world populations of freckled ducks, musk ducks, blue-billed ducks, black swans, Australasian shovellers, pink-eared ducks, hoary-headed grebes, straw-necked ibises, sharp-tailed sandpipers and white-headed stilts.The additional lakes in the IBA are:
- Cundare Pool / Lake Martin; ; saline
- Lough Calvert
- Lake Thurrumbong