Our water quality monitoring program has shown Willinga Lake to have fair water quality. Find out more about the estuary and its unique features.
Willinga Lake is small coastal lagoon with an intermittently closed entrance. It is located on the south coast on New South Wales and enters the ocean just north of the boundary of Batemans Marine Park.
Water quality report card
As part of our water quality monitoring program we assess the water quality and ecosystem health of an estuary using a range of relevant indicators. We sample a subset of the estuaries between Wollongong and the Victorian border every 3 years. The most recent sampling in Willinga Lake was completed over the 2014–15 summer, when 2 sites were sampled on a monthly basis.
This report card represents 2 water quality indicators that we routinely measure: the amount of algae present and water clarity. Low levels of these 2 indicators equate with good water quality.
C
Algae
C
Water clarity
C
Overall grade
The report card shows the condition of the estuary was fair with:
algae abundance graded fair (C)
water clarity graded fair (C)
overall estuary health graded fair (C).
Grades for algae, water clarity and overall are represented as:
A – excellent
B – good
C – fair
D – poor
E – very poor.
Go to estuary report cards to find out what each grade means, read our sampling, data analysis and reporting protocols, and find out how we calculate these grades.
We have monitored water quality in Willinga Lake since 2011. This table shows the water quality grades for this estuary over that time.
Year
Algae
Water clarity
Overall grade
2011–12
C
D
C
Physical characteristics
Estuary type
Back-dune lagoon
Latitude
–35.5 (ºS)
Longitude
150.39 (ºE)
Catchment area
13.6 km2
Estuary area
0.3 km2
Estuary volume
94.6 ML
Average depth
0.3 m
Notes: km2 = square kilometres; m = metres; ML = megalitres.
The catchment of Willinga Lake is moderately disturbed, with 20% cleared for grazing and urban land use at Bawley Point. Over 70% of the catchment is forest, some of which lies in Meroo National Park and Murramarang National Park.
There is no marine park associated with this estuary, but the estuary entrance opens to the ocean just north of the boundary of Batemans Marine Park(link is external).
Citizen science
The Budawang Coast Nature Map(link is external) is an online data platform the community can use to record and identify biodiversity. Data collected is used to map the distribution of native plant and animal species from Moruya up almost to Kiama.