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Measuring Environmental Condition of Rivers

Urban and rural river health - Index of River Condition

Melbourne Water's Index of River Condition (IRC) program is a tool designed to provide an overall integrated measure of the environmental condition of rivers. The Index of River Condition is based on the Index of Stream Condition, developed by Department of Sustainability and Environment for rural rivers and creeks.

The Index of Stream Condition has been modified to account for the urban rivers and creeks in Melbourne Water's operating area. It includes data for all of the rivers and creeks that we manage.

It combines information on the:

  • natural flow regime
  • water quality
  • condition of the channel
  • condition of riparian (streamside) vegetation
  • waterbug communities living in the river.

Related information:

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How to read the Index of River Condition

The index is broken into 5 parts. It provides a summary of the extent of change from natural or ideal conditions for each of the parts:

Index Part Description
physical form river bank and bed condition, presence of and access to physical habitat, artificial barriers
streamside zone quality and quantity of streamside vegetation
hydrology flow volume and seasonality of flow
water quality key water quality indicators compared against Victorian Government environment protection policy water quality objectives
aquatic life diversity of macro invertebrates

Each part is scored out of a maximum of 10, so that the overall score for the index will vary between a minimum of 0 and a maximum of 50.

River condition is then allocated to one of five classifications:

  • --------very poor
  • --------poor
  • --------moderate
  • --------good
  • --------excellent

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More information

View the current Index of River Condition data for the Port Phillip and Westernport region.

Water quality data for Victorian rivers and creeks outside the Port Phillip and Westernport region can be accessed at the Water Resources Victorian Data Warehouse.

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