HaRWEST

Urban Platypus, Fishing and River Pollution

Platypus in Western Sydney: Protecting an Iconic Species

Did you know that platypuses inhabit the rivers and creeks of Western Sydney? Research by Western Sydney University, led by Dr Michelle Ryan in partnership with local communities and government, has identified several platypus hotspots in the Hawkesbury-Nepean catchment area in low numbers. Platypus in New South Wales are not listed as threatened due to limited baseline data, especially for Western Sydney.

The Hawkesbury-Nepean Platypus Project has been working for several years to change this, using the platypus as a flagship species to inspire our community to reconnect with and care for our rivers, with the team adding 65 new known locations of platypus to the scientific database of platypus in Greater Western Sydney (an increase from 2 records since the 1990s).

Destructive Fishing Practices on our Platypus

Platypus breathe air and can only be underwater for three or four minutes, coming up frequently. They use waterways to forage up to 14 hours per night for their food and use riverbanks for their burrows. Fishing lines, illegal and outdated fishing traps and humans can cause platypus mortality. Our records show nine platypuses have drowned in these traps over the past few years.

Unfortunately, the local platypus population faces several significant threats! Fishing practices are one major cause:

If you find an injured or stuck platypus, call WIRES immediately. Don't pick them up - you might get stung by their spurs! Reach out to WIRES by calling the dedicated Rescue Office (24/7) on 1300 094 737.

Other threats to our platypus include:

What can you do to help platypus in your local area?

By working together, we can make Western Sydney's rivers safe for our biodiversity.

Fishing rod with line in water

Find a location near you to dispose of your old or unwanted fishing line and tackle to keep it out of our waterways

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Photo of abandoned opera house trap

Hand in your illegal Opera House yabby traps and recycle them into new useful products for fishers with OzFish

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Platypus being released back into River

Recreational fishing is a popular Aussie activity but many people accidentally kill platypus. Learn why and what you can do to help

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