Botanica Park lake Bundoora

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Background

  • Botanica Park lake is located 16km north of Melbourne in the suburb of Bundoora.
  • The lake was built in 1999.
  • The lake is divided into two sections
    • Northern lake (Upper lake)
    • Southern lake (Lower lake)

Northern lake

  • Stormwater enters the lake from a relatively small catchment (approximately 100 house roofs and road surfaces)
  • Stormwater is treated through a Gross Pollutant Trap (GPT) which removal leaves and large litter items
  • Stormwater then enters the northern lake where aquatic plants help to remove excess nutrients from the water.
  • The northern lake is shallow (0.5m to 1.5m depth) and is shaded by River Red gum trees.

Southern lake

  • Stormwater enters the southern lake (from the northern lake) during rain events.
  • A weir underneath a footbridge separates the two lakes.
  • The southern lake is deeper, has steep embankments and contains large submerged stands of eel grass as the predominant vegetation.
  • During rain events, water will exit the southern lake in a raised stormwater pit (underneath the decking on the east of the lake). Water travels via a Melbourne Water drain and empties into Blau Street Park further south, before entering the Darebin Creek.


  • The City of Whittlesea has adopted the Water for All Strategy 2020-2030 which identifies cleaner waterways as one of five key outcomes for success.
  • Many of Council’s existing water assets need to be renewed because they are not providing adequate stormwater treatment and are therefore compromising the health of local waterways.
  • In addition to treating stormwater, water treatment assets improve amenity values, assist with urban cooling, and provide a safe habitat for birds, frogs and other native animals.

History at Botanica Park

• June 2017 – Botanica Park Lake Masterplan. • Feb 2018 - Avian botulism outbreak early 2018 resulting in more than 40 bird and fish deaths at lake. Lake fenced off and community educated about not feeding ducks. Previous duck population at lake was 200. • Mar 2018 – Park upgrade. New playground installation. • Aug 2018 – Engeny investigation into water quality and treatment options. • May 2019 – Peter Homan audit of frog habitat improvement opportunities. • Aug 2019 – Aquatica Environmental audit of biota in lake. • Feb 2020 - Commencement of revegetation works at Botanica Park Northern Lake • June 2020 – Revegetation of Botanica Park Northern Lake with NatureLinks.

Animals

Birds

Frogs

Plants