As an amplified La Niña weather event turned life on the Australian east coast into a flooded misery over recent weeks, it has also played a role in helping bring the vast desert lake near the middle of the continent to life.
Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre is about 700km north of Adelaide, covers more than 9,000 sq km – an area roughly equivalent to greater suburban Melbourne – and is the lowest point on the Australian mainland.
When the tropical monsoon hits, floodwaters flow from major rivers in the channel country of outback Queensland. That last happened on a large scale in 2019, when the area was inundated for the first time in decades.
Vegetation flourishes in normally dry river channels after uncommonly high local rainfall at Anna Creek Station. Photograph: Doug Gimesy
This year the Queensland waterways have not contributed as much to filling the lake, at least to this point, though some water is still flowing down from the Diamantina River. Instead, the lake itself was hit with a dump of local rain in January more than twice the long-term average, and water has flowed in from the nearby Flinders Ranges.
A flock of Australian pelicans fly over a river channel that cuts through Lake Eyre North. Photograph: Doug Gimesy
Rivers, green with vegetation, flow near the edge of Lake Eyre North. Photograph: Doug Gimesy
It is not as wet as three years ago but, as seen from the air by photographer Doug Gimesy, the result is a spectacular dance of pinks, blues, greens and browns as the water replaces red dirt and the dry lake’s white salt pan.
Pink water at the edge of the salt pan and land in the Madigan Gulf. Photograph: Doug Gimesy
The edge of Lake Eyre North showing water (brown), salt pan and water flow patterns. Photograph: Doug Gimesy
Prof Richard Kingsford, a conservation biologist at the University of New South Wales, has been studying the globally significant lake ecosystem for more than three decades and says there has not been rainfall like this over the lake since the 1980s.
To see the filling lake in person, he says, is breathtaking.
“It is absolutely amazing,” Kingsford says. “I never tire of flying over it because every time you do it, it’s different. Just the expanse of it. You get these amazing pink colours.”
An aerial view of a pond reflecting the light in Lake Eyre South just after sunrise. Photograph: Doug Gimesy
“When it’s full it’s like a mirror and you get this thing where you lose your horizon. I remember being with pilots saying they had to use their instruments [to fly] because it was the only way to navigate.”
The ecosystem comes alive when there is enough fresh water to dilute the salt that rests on the dry lake floor. Then, tiny microscopic crustaceans hatch from egg cases at the bottom of the lake. That in turn brings saltwater fish and bird species – pelicans, pink-eared ducks, banded stilts and migratory waders such as the sharp-tailed sandpipers.
Corellas perch in a tree near a water hole at Beresford Railway Siding. Photograph: Scott Portelli
A flock of corellas fly across the dusk sky. Photograph: Scott Portelli
“I still remember counting birds there in the 1990s and there was 300,000 birds there of every species you could imagine. It was just like clouds of these birds flying up in front of us,” Kingsford says.
The transformation of the landscape this year has been welcomed by traditional owners, ecologists, graziers and tourist operators, who fly sightseeing trips across the transforming country.
Estuaries and channels form as water flows at Neales Inlet from the Neale River in Lake Eyre North. Photograph: Scott Portelli
Vegetation flourishes in the red desert after heavy rains in the usually dry area. Photograph: Doug Gimesy
The Lake Eyre Basin is considered one of the planet’s last remaining pristine desert river systems and is a contested space. Locals have campaigned to stop development harnessing and rediverting the flow of water. Two decades ago there was a push to expand cotton irrigation in south-western and central Queensland.
Now, the big development push is from energy companies eyeing the channel country’s fossil fuel reserves. Gas is locked several kilometres down, with government reports suggesting it would need hydraulic fracturing to liberate it.
Kingsford says plans to build dams are also a risk to the basin’s health. “There are always big threats,” he says. “Thankfully, it’s pretty much still a free-flowing river system.”
An aerial view of water flowing over the salt pan edge into Lake Eyre South. Photograph: Doug Gimesy