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It is stocked with Australian native fish such as barramundi, bass, golden perch and silver perch under the Queensland Governments stocked impoundment permit scheme. Other aquatic species which inhabit the lake include spangled grunter, saratoga, Krefft's turtle, Flinders Ranges mogurnda, rainbow fish, fire tail gudgeon, long finned eel and many more.
The dam is stocked with silver perch and golden perch, while bony bream, spangled perch and eel-tailed catfish breed naturally. [2] A Stocked Impoundment Permit is required to fish in the dam. [ 5 ] The poor water quality means that fish caught in the dam may, at times of an algae outbreak , be a health hazard if eaten.
The dam wall is an earth and rock-fill embankment type. It has a surface area of 7.6 square kilometres (1,878 acres), an average depth of 12 metres (39 ft) and a capacity of 88,580 ML. The dam is named after the abandoned gold mining town of Cania, which was inundated by the lake as it filled.
Kinchant Dam is a dam in the locality of Kinchant Dam in the Mackay Region, Queensland, Australia. [2] It created the reservoir Lake Kinchant ( 21°13′00″S 148°53′00″E / 21.2166°S 148.8833°E / -21.2166; 148.8833 ( Lake Kinchant
The Impoundment Control Act of 1974, in Trump’s telling, is “not a very good act; this disaster of a law is clearly unconstitutional, a blatant violation of the separation of powers.”
A Gold Coast City Council permit is required to fish in the dam. [16] A Queensland State Government Stocked Impoundment Permit is not required. [17] From December 2018, Queensland Health advise not to consume fish from Hinze Dam due to elevated levels of mercury in recent fish samples. [18]
The dam is stocked with bass, golden perch, silver perch and barramundi, while eel-tailed catfish, and bony bream are present naturally. [5] A Stocked Impoundment Permit is required to fish in the dam. [9] In 1993 and 1994, more than 60,000 barramundi were released into the dam, thought the furthest south that the species could survive. [5]
It is located approximately 50 km west of Mackay, Queensland. It has a surface area of 1,040 hectares, an average depth of 14.2 metres and holds 147,500 Ml. It has a surface area of 1,040 hectares, an average depth of 14.2 metres and holds 147,500 Ml.