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The 'enduring' mystery of how birds know when Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre is filling with water
The 'enduring' mystery of how birds know when Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre is filling with water

ABC News

time27-06-2025

  • Science
  • ABC News

The 'enduring' mystery of how birds know when Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre is filling with water

The most arid corner of Australia is about to burst with life, as Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre braces to reach capacity for just the fourth time in the past 160 years. While the usually-barren salt flats rapidly fill with floodwater from south western Queensland, migratory waterbirds like seagulls, swans, ducks and pelicans will begin descending to the inland oasis in the hundreds of thousands. So — with the lake expected to become entirely full in the coming months — how do birds know that this once-in-a-generation event is happening? The question is one University of New South Wales Professor Richard Kingsford has been striving to answer for the majority of his career. He's spent the past four decades monitoring water birds through aerial surveys. "Birds can go incredible distances," Professor Kingsford said. "Unlike water birds in other parts of the world, that sort of regularly migrate between spring and winter — we don't see any of that. Professor Kingsford said while the majority of the waterbirds found at Kati Thunda-Lake Eyre are native to Australia, some species will travel from as far as China, Russia and Antarctica. He said the birds will capitalise on the opportunities to breed at varying times based on the availability of vegetation, invertebrates and fish. "There's that huge smorgasbord of food," Professor Kingsford said. "It sort of triggers that cascade of different types of species coming in at different points. "You get these wonderful sort of pulses of productivity depending on which waterbird you're talking about." Professor Kingsford said — while still complex — tracking waterbirds had become somewhat easier in recent years with the arrival of satellite tracking technology. "And it it is one of the great mysteries for Australia is how do these birds know where the water is and head off? "We are starting to get some ideas of how they probably do it though." Ecologist Reece Pedler became fascinated by the movements of waterbirds while living in the remote South Australian town of Roxby Downs for a decade. "I now live up in the Strzelecki Desert … so I see this stuff first-hand in my life in the outback that birds are flying around and doing these amazing things," Mr Pedler said. "Birds can arrive really rapidly and their ecology is geared to these unpredictable events. "But we don't know exactly how they know." Mr Pedler, who is the coordinator of the Wild Deserts Project in Sturt National Park, previously studied the breeding behaviour of the banded stilt using solar-powered trackers as part of his PhD. The threatened bird species is most commonly found in Australia's saline coastal wetlands, such as the Coroong or at St Kilda Beach, north of Adelaide. "Those banded stilts might be there for months and months on end or live there year round, " Mr Pedler said. "Then suddenly they disappear when places like Lake Eyre or other lakes in the Western Australian desert fill. Mr Pedler said the abundance of brine shrimp at Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre creates a rare breeding-ground for the threatened species. "They don't breed anywhere else around the coast … so they have to wait years or decades for those opportunities," he said. "And when they breed, they breed in real style, they have thousands of pairs. Mr Pedler said while it was once thought the birds only flew after significant wet events, minimal rainfall was enough to trigger the stilts to leave the coast and head inland. "There's some really complex triggers too because this water that's flowing into Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre now fell in western Queensland in the last week of March," he said. "So the stilts and other water birds that would be turning up at Lake Eyre now are not responding to rainfall or atmospheric queues that have happened in the days prior. "There's potentially lots of different mechanisms occurring and it may be that some different groups of birds have different ways of sensing these things." Several theories of how birds know when Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre is filling exist, including them having the ability to detect infrasound, barometric pressure or smell the flooded salt flats on the breeze. "There's been theories like scouts … if pelicans send up observers to go and recce inland sites and come back and tell their mates that there's food on offer," Mr Pedler said. "I guess there's some rationale for that because pelicans can fairly easily fly long distances, they get up to high altitude on thermals and then they can cruise and go for a look. "It's still an open case and there's a lot more work to understand this really fascinating behaviour." Professor Kingsford said as more technology emerges and becomes cheaper, the more scientists like himself will be able to shed light on how birds are able to do what they do. "What's most important about that is working out when are the critical times that we need to protect particular habitats in their life cycle," he said. "I'd love to try and work out what's going on and others are too.

Rare event breathes life back into Australia's arid outback, attracting both animals and tourists
Rare event breathes life back into Australia's arid outback, attracting both animals and tourists

Yahoo

time25-06-2025

  • Science
  • Yahoo

Rare event breathes life back into Australia's arid outback, attracting both animals and tourists

It appears in satellite pictures like great blotches of blue and green ink; swirling, spreading, sinking into parchment paper. In Australia's arid center, those blotches represent a new inland sea, born from a deluge that has traveled hundreds of miles through the veins of a giant, parched continent. The rare event is now breathing life into the desert, bringing mammals, birds and tourists to the heart of the Australian outback. 'Imponderable' is how ecologist Richard Kingsford of the University of New South Wales describes the possibilities for scientific discovery offered by the rise of this sudden oasis in one of the world's thirstiest areas. 'It's the water birds, the spectacular flowing water through the middle of a desert. It's the fish that are in the rivers. It's also the months afterwards, where you get carpets of wildflowers growing across the desert,' he says. 'Rare events are not well understood, because they're rare. We don't know quite how big this flood is going to be.' Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre is a 3,668-square-mile ephemeral lake and, despite the name is rarely very wet, receiving just 5.5 inches of rain on average per year. It could be more readily thought of as a giant salt pan in the South Australian desert. In 1964, British speed record breaker Donald Campbell used Kati-Thanda Lake Eyre as a racetrack, rocketing to a then-world land record speed of 403.1 mph across the wide, unbroken expanse. Ten years after Campbell's shot across the salt flats, in 1974, the lake filled to its capacity for just the third time on record. That flooding has been taken as the high-water mark and not seen since, though smaller-scale events have been recorded in recent years. This year, after Tropical Cyclone Alfred dumped on inland Queensland in March, the water flowing down to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre appears to be filling it for just the fourth time in 160 years. There are two main arteries feeding Lake Eyre — the Georgina-Diamantina River, which began filling Kati-Thanda Lake Eyre's north in early May, and the Cooper Creek system. Cooper Creek, named somewhat erroneously by early British explorer Charles Sturt, is hardly a creek. 'It can be 60 to 80 kilometers (about 37-50 miles) wide in a flood,' says Kingsford. The water brought by that second system has not yet reached Kati-Thanda Lake Eyre and may not take its full effect until October. By the time it does arrive, the desert ecosystem will be feeling the explosive extremes of its boom-and-bust cycle. Shrimps and crustaceans will be spawning, fish numbers will skyrocket, mammals like the endangered Crest-tailed Mulgara and the Dusky Hopping Mouse will get their chance to propagate. Pelicans, stilts and other waterbirds will find their way to Kati-Thanda Lake Eyre from as far away as China and Japan. The dust and sand will turn green, blooming in native shrubs with colorful flowers. The birds are not the only ones flying in to see this oasis. 'There are not many wild places on earth anymore, and this is a wild place and a spectacular place,' Kingsford says. 'Quite clearly, these floods bring many local and international visitors to see this phenomenon. 'It does trigger a tremendous tourism boom.' The influx of visitors hasn't been without growing pains as the area adapts to its newfound popularity. In February, the South Australian government announced a new ban on people walking on the lake bed, both to protect the fragile salt crust and surface, and to prevent injuries in a remote place where medical help is not always close at hand. The ban also supports the cultural practices of the Arabana people, who consider the lake sacred. But according to a recent report by Australian public broadcaster ABC, people continue to venture out onto the lake bed due to a lack of signage highlighting the rule. The government has said it will add new signage and visitor infrastructure to the area soon. To serve the tourist market, operators like Phil van Wegen dedicate themselves to a life in Australia's remote outback. Marree, a town south of Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre, is where van Wegen runs Arid Air, a flight company that takes tourists for joyrides over the huge lake on Cessna propeller planes. 'The flight, the route that we do, just blows people away,' he says. To him, the desert is 'vast, forever changing and spectacular.' 'So if anyone's got any ambition to come and see it, Marree is a relatively easy shot. We're only about 700 kilometers (435 miles) out of Adelaide and its bitumen all the way to the front door,' van Wegen assures. The Ghan train line ran through Maree up until the 1980s, ensuring a 'bumbling busy little town,' van Wegen says. Now he's one of 50 to 60 people who live there and believes it's the vast distances that help to keep Kati-Thanda Lake Eyre pristine. 'It's lucky that it's just so remote, you know, and it's so far from anywhere that it just doesn't get touched or tapped or anything. That's its own self-preservation.' That does not mean Kati-Thanda Lake Eyre is without its protectors. Conservationists Annemarie van Doorn and Luke Playford watch over the region like sentinels. Together, the pair manage the Kalamurina Wildlife Sanctuary, a 679,667-hectare property owned by the Australian Wildlife Conservancy on the eastern shore of the lake. The vastness of their world can only truly be understood from the helicopter they use to do their conservation work. The property they alone are responsible for is the size of Delaware. When the area is dry, and the roads are open, they can get to the nearest supermarket — a nine-hour drive away in the South Australian town of Port Augusta. Now, however, the floodwaters have cut off the dirt roads that link them to civilization. They'll stay in their desert home, trapped by water for months, possibly through the rest of the year. The Royal Flying Doctor Service lands once a month to check in on them. 'You just see nothing around you. It's so, so quiet,' Van Doorn tells CNN by phone. 'There's no light pollution, there's no noise. And you look up and there's a dingo walking around on the sand dune, and you think, 'how lucky are we?',' she says. 'Then there's other times where you've got flies crawling up your nose and in your eyes, and it's 48 degrees Celsius (118 degrees Fahrenheit), and you think, 'wow, this is pretty miserable,' but you're doing it for a great cause.' The couple's great cause is keeping a pristine environment that way. That largely involves keeping a lid on the population of feral animals such as wild boar and camels. Around two-thirds of the water that flows into Kati-Thanda Lake Eyre passes through Kalamurina, and the couple will watch life transform their barren world. 'This is special because it's a natural event,' Playford says. 'It's the largest flood in 50 years, and while that did a lot of damage in Queensland, this is an act that's not induced by climate change. It's a special occasion.' 'A good news story,' van Doorn adds. 'There is hope out there.' That hope is shared by ecologist Kingsford, who will join tourists, conservationists and other scientists in hours of outback road and air travel to catch a glimpse of a desert turned temporarily fecund. 'I'm a conservation biologist, and so it's often depressing to look at the world and what we're doing to it, and this gives me incredible optimism to be able to see this system still going through its natural rhythms in such a spectacular way.'

Record rainfall is transforming this desert into a teeming oasis in the middle of Australia's outback
Record rainfall is transforming this desert into a teeming oasis in the middle of Australia's outback

CNN

time25-06-2025

  • Science
  • CNN

Record rainfall is transforming this desert into a teeming oasis in the middle of Australia's outback

It appears in satellite pictures like great blotches of blue and green ink; swirling, spreading, sinking into parchment paper. In Australia's arid center, those blotches represent a new inland sea, born from a deluge that has traveled hundreds of miles through the veins of a giant, parched continent. The rare event is now breathing life into the desert, bringing mammals, birds and tourists to the heart of the Australian outback. 'Imponderable' is how ecologist Richard Kingsford of the University of New South Wales describes the possibilities for scientific discovery offered by the rise of this sudden oasis in one of the world's thirstiest areas. 'It's the water birds, the spectacular flowing water through the middle of a desert. It's the fish that are in the rivers. It's also the months afterwards, where you get carpets of wildflowers growing across the desert,' he says. 'Rare events are not well understood, because they're rare. We don't know quite how big this flood is going to be.' Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre is a 3,668-square-mile ephemeral lake and, despite the name is rarely very wet, receiving just 5.5 inches of rain on average per year. It could be more readily thought of as a giant salt pan in the South Australian desert. In 1964, British speed record breaker Donald Campbell used Kati-Thanda Lake Eyre as a racetrack, rocketing to a then-world land record speed of 403.1 mph across the wide, unbroken expanse. Ten years after Campbell's shot across the salt flats, in 1974, the lake filled to its capacity for just the third time on record. That flooding has been taken as the high-water mark and not seen since, though smaller-scale events have been recorded in recent years. This year, after Tropical Cyclone Alfred dumped on inland Queensland in March, the water flowing down to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre appears to be filling it for just the fourth time in 160 years. There are two main arteries feeding Lake Eyre — the Georgina-Diamantina River, which began filling Kati-Thanda Lake Eyre's north in early May, and the Cooper Creek system. Cooper Creek, named somewhat erroneously by early British explorer Charles Sturt, is hardly a creek. 'It can be 60 to 80 kilometers (about 37-50 miles) wide in a flood,' says Kingsford. The water brought by that second system has not yet reached Kati-Thanda Lake Eyre and may not take its full effect until October. By the time it does arrive, the desert ecosystem will be feeling the explosive extremes of its boom-and-bust cycle. Shrimps and crustaceans will be spawning, fish numbers will skyrocket, mammals like the endangered Crest-tailed Mulgara and the Dusky Hopping Mouse will get their chance to propagate. Pelicans, stilts and other waterbirds will find their way to Kati-Thanda Lake Eyre from as far away as China and Japan. The dust and sand will turn green, blooming in native shrubs with colorful flowers. The birds are not the only ones flying in to see this oasis. 'There are not many wild places on earth anymore, and this is a wild place and a spectacular place,' Kingsford says. 'Quite clearly, these floods bring many local and international visitors to see this phenomenon. 'It does trigger a tremendous tourism boom.' The influx of visitors hasn't been without growing pains as the area adapts to its newfound popularity. In February, the South Australian government announced a new ban on people walking on the lake bed, both to protect the fragile salt crust and surface, and to prevent injuries in a remote place where medical help is not always close at hand. The ban also supports the cultural practices of the Arabana people, who consider the lake sacred. But according to a recent report by Australian public broadcaster ABC, people continue to venture out onto the lake bed due to a lack of signage highlighting the rule. The government has said it will add new signage and visitor infrastructure to the area soon. To serve the tourist market, operators like Phil van Wegen dedicate themselves to a life in Australia's remote outback. Marree, a town south of Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre, is where van Wegen runs Arid Air, a flight company that takes tourists for joyrides over the huge lake on Cessna propeller planes. 'The flight, the route that we do, just blows people away,' he says. To him, the desert is 'vast, forever changing and spectacular.' 'So if anyone's got any ambition to come and see it, Marree is a relatively easy shot. We're only about 700 kilometers (435 miles) out of Adelaide and its bitumen all the way to the front door,' van Wegen assures. The Ghan train line ran through Maree up until the 1980s, ensuring a 'bumbling busy little town,' van Wegen says. Now he's one of 50 to 60 people who live there and believes it's the vast distances that help to keep Kati-Thanda Lake Eyre pristine. 'It's lucky that it's just so remote, you know, and it's so far from anywhere that it just doesn't get touched or tapped or anything. That's its own self-preservation.' That does not mean Kati-Thanda Lake Eyre is without its protectors. Conservationists Annemarie van Doorn and Luke Playford watch over the region like sentinels. Together, the pair manage the Kalamurina Wildlife Sanctuary, a 679,667-hectare property owned by the Australian Wildlife Conservancy on the eastern shore of the lake. The vastness of their world can only truly be understood from the helicopter they use to do their conservation work. The property they alone are responsible for is the size of Delaware. When the area is dry, and the roads are open, they can get to the nearest supermarket — a nine-hour drive away in the South Australian town of Port Augusta. Now, however, the floodwaters have cut off the dirt roads that link them to civilization. They'll stay in their desert home, trapped by water for months, possibly through the rest of the year. The Royal Flying Doctor Service lands once a month to check in on them. 'You just see nothing around you. It's so, so quiet,' Van Doorn tells CNN by phone. 'There's no light pollution, there's no noise. And you look up and there's a dingo walking around on the sand dune, and you think, 'how lucky are we?',' she says. 'Then there's other times where you've got flies crawling up your nose and in your eyes, and it's 48 degrees Celsius (118 degrees Fahrenheit), and you think, 'wow, this is pretty miserable,' but you're doing it for a great cause.' The couple's great cause is keeping a pristine environment that way. That largely involves keeping a lid on the population of feral animals such as wild boar and camels. Around two-thirds of the water that flows into Kati-Thanda Lake Eyre passes through Kalamurina, and the couple will watch life transform their barren world. 'This is special because it's a natural event,' Playford says. 'It's the largest flood in 50 years, and while that did a lot of damage in Queensland, this is an act that's not induced by climate change. It's a special occasion.' 'A good news story,' van Doorn adds. 'There is hope out there.' That hope is shared by ecologist Kingsford, who will join tourists, conservationists and other scientists in hours of outback road and air travel to catch a glimpse of a desert turned temporarily fecund. 'I'm a conservation biologist, and so it's often depressing to look at the world and what we're doing to it, and this gives me incredible optimism to be able to see this system still going through its natural rhythms in such a spectacular way.'

Record rainfall is transforming this desert into a teeming oasis in the middle of Australia's outback
Record rainfall is transforming this desert into a teeming oasis in the middle of Australia's outback

CNN

time25-06-2025

  • Science
  • CNN

Record rainfall is transforming this desert into a teeming oasis in the middle of Australia's outback

It appears in satellite pictures like great blotches of blue and green ink; swirling, spreading, sinking into parchment paper. In Australia's arid center, those blotches represent a new inland sea, born from a deluge that has traveled hundreds of miles through the veins of a giant, parched continent. The rare event is now breathing life into the desert, bringing mammals, birds and tourists to the heart of the Australian outback. 'Imponderable' is how ecologist Richard Kingsford of the University of New South Wales describes the possibilities for scientific discovery offered by the rise of this sudden oasis in one of the world's thirstiest areas. 'It's the water birds, the spectacular flowing water through the middle of a desert. It's the fish that are in the rivers. It's also the months afterwards, where you get carpets of wildflowers growing across the desert,' he says. 'Rare events are not well understood, because they're rare. We don't know quite how big this flood is going to be.' Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre is a 3,668-square-mile ephemeral lake and, despite the name is rarely very wet, receiving just 5.5 inches of rain on average per year. It could be more readily thought of as a giant salt pan in the South Australian desert. In 1964, British speed record breaker Donald Campbell used Kati-Thanda Lake Eyre as a racetrack, rocketing to a then-world land record speed of 403.1 mph across the wide, unbroken expanse. Ten years after Campbell's shot across the salt flats, in 1974, the lake filled to its capacity for just the third time on record. That flooding has been taken as the high-water mark and not seen since, though smaller-scale events have been recorded in recent years. This year, after Tropical Cyclone Alfred dumped on inland Queensland in March, the water flowing down to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre appears to be filling it for just the fourth time in 160 years. There are two main arteries feeding Lake Eyre — the Georgina-Diamantina River, which began filling Kati-Thanda Lake Eyre's north in early May, and the Cooper Creek system. Cooper Creek, named somewhat erroneously by early British explorer Charles Sturt, is hardly a creek. 'It can be 60 to 80 kilometers (about 37-50 miles) wide in a flood,' says Kingsford. The water brought by that second system has not yet reached Kati-Thanda Lake Eyre and may not take its full effect until October. By the time it does arrive, the desert ecosystem will be feeling the explosive extremes of its boom-and-bust cycle. Shrimps and crustaceans will be spawning, fish numbers will skyrocket, mammals like the endangered Crest-tailed Mulgara and the Dusky Hopping Mouse will get their chance to propagate. Pelicans, stilts and other waterbirds will find their way to Kati-Thanda Lake Eyre from as far away as China and Japan. The dust and sand will turn green, blooming in native shrubs with colorful flowers. The birds are not the only ones flying in to see this oasis. 'There are not many wild places on earth anymore, and this is a wild place and a spectacular place,' Kingsford says. 'Quite clearly, these floods bring many local and international visitors to see this phenomenon. 'It does trigger a tremendous tourism boom.' The influx of visitors hasn't been without growing pains as the area adapts to its newfound popularity. In February, the South Australian government announced a new ban on people walking on the lake bed, both to protect the fragile salt crust and surface, and to prevent injuries in a remote place where medical help is not always close at hand. The ban also supports the cultural practices of the Arabana people, who consider the lake sacred. But according to a recent report by Australian public broadcaster ABC, people continue to venture out onto the lake bed due to a lack of signage highlighting the rule. The government has said it will add new signage and visitor infrastructure to the area soon. To serve the tourist market, operators like Phil van Wegen dedicate themselves to a life in Australia's remote outback. Marree, a town south of Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre, is where van Wegen runs Arid Air, a flight company that takes tourists for joyrides over the huge lake on Cessna propeller planes. 'The flight, the route that we do, just blows people away,' he says. To him, the desert is 'vast, forever changing and spectacular.' 'So if anyone's got any ambition to come and see it, Marree is a relatively easy shot. We're only about 700 kilometers (435 miles) out of Adelaide and its bitumen all the way to the front door,' van Wegen assures. The Ghan train line ran through Maree up until the 1980s, ensuring a 'bumbling busy little town,' van Wegen says. Now he's one of 50 to 60 people who live there and believes it's the vast distances that help to keep Kati-Thanda Lake Eyre pristine. 'It's lucky that it's just so remote, you know, and it's so far from anywhere that it just doesn't get touched or tapped or anything. That's its own self-preservation.' That does not mean Kati-Thanda Lake Eyre is without its protectors. Conservationists Annemarie van Doorn and Luke Playford watch over the region like sentinels. Together, the pair manage the Kalamurina Wildlife Sanctuary, a 679,667-hectare property owned by the Australian Wildlife Conservancy on the eastern shore of the lake. The vastness of their world can only truly be understood from the helicopter they use to do their conservation work. The property they alone are responsible for is the size of Delaware. When the area is dry, and the roads are open, they can get to the nearest supermarket — a nine-hour drive away in the South Australian town of Port Augusta. Now, however, the floodwaters have cut off the dirt roads that link them to civilization. They'll stay in their desert home, trapped by water for months, possibly through the rest of the year. The Royal Flying Doctor Service lands once a month to check in on them. 'You just see nothing around you. It's so, so quiet,' Van Doorn tells CNN by phone. 'There's no light pollution, there's no noise. And you look up and there's a dingo walking around on the sand dune, and you think, 'how lucky are we?',' she says. 'Then there's other times where you've got flies crawling up your nose and in your eyes, and it's 48 degrees Celsius (118 degrees Fahrenheit), and you think, 'wow, this is pretty miserable,' but you're doing it for a great cause.' The couple's great cause is keeping a pristine environment that way. That largely involves keeping a lid on the population of feral animals such as wild boar and camels. Around two-thirds of the water that flows into Kati-Thanda Lake Eyre passes through Kalamurina, and the couple will watch life transform their barren world. 'This is special because it's a natural event,' Playford says. 'It's the largest flood in 50 years, and while that did a lot of damage in Queensland, this is an act that's not induced by climate change. It's a special occasion.' 'A good news story,' van Doorn adds. 'There is hope out there.' That hope is shared by ecologist Kingsford, who will join tourists, conservationists and other scientists in hours of outback road and air travel to catch a glimpse of a desert turned temporarily fecund. 'I'm a conservation biologist, and so it's often depressing to look at the world and what we're doing to it, and this gives me incredible optimism to be able to see this system still going through its natural rhythms in such a spectacular way.'

Record rainfall is transforming this desert into a teeming oasis in the middle of Australia's outback
Record rainfall is transforming this desert into a teeming oasis in the middle of Australia's outback

CNN

time25-06-2025

  • Science
  • CNN

Record rainfall is transforming this desert into a teeming oasis in the middle of Australia's outback

It appears in satellite pictures like great blotches of blue and green ink; swirling, spreading, sinking into parchment paper. In Australia's arid center, those blotches represent a new inland sea, born from a deluge that has traveled hundreds of miles through the veins of a giant, parched continent. The rare event is now breathing life into the desert, bringing mammals, birds and tourists to the heart of the Australian outback. 'Imponderable' is how ecologist Richard Kingsford of the University of New South Wales describes the possibilities for scientific discovery offered by the rise of this sudden oasis in one of the world's thirstiest areas. 'It's the water birds, the spectacular flowing water through the middle of a desert. It's the fish that are in the rivers. It's also the months afterwards, where you get carpets of wildflowers growing across the desert,' he says. 'Rare events are not well understood, because they're rare. We don't know quite how big this flood is going to be.' Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre is a 3,668-square-mile ephemeral lake and, despite the name is rarely very wet, receiving just 5.5 inches of rain on average per year. It could be more readily thought of as a giant salt pan in the South Australian desert. In 1964, British speed record breaker Donald Campbell used Kati-Thanda Lake Eyre as a racetrack, rocketing to a then-world land record speed of 403.1 mph across the wide, unbroken expanse. Ten years after Campbell's shot across the salt flats, in 1974, the lake filled to its capacity for just the third time on record. That flooding has been taken as the high-water mark and not seen since, though smaller-scale events have been recorded in recent years. This year, after Tropical Cyclone Alfred dumped on inland Queensland in March, the water flowing down to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre appears to be filling it for just the fourth time in 160 years. There are two main arteries feeding Lake Eyre — the Georgina-Diamantina River, which began filling Kati-Thanda Lake Eyre's north in early May, and the Cooper Creek system. Cooper Creek, named somewhat erroneously by early British explorer Charles Sturt, is hardly a creek. 'It can be 60 to 80 kilometers (about 37-50 miles) wide in a flood,' says Kingsford. The water brought by that second system has not yet reached Kati-Thanda Lake Eyre and may not take its full effect until October. By the time it does arrive, the desert ecosystem will be feeling the explosive extremes of its boom-and-bust cycle. Shrimps and crustaceans will be spawning, fish numbers will skyrocket, mammals like the endangered Crest-tailed Mulgara and the Dusky Hopping Mouse will get their chance to propagate. Pelicans, stilts and other waterbirds will find their way to Kati-Thanda Lake Eyre from as far away as China and Japan. The dust and sand will turn green, blooming in native shrubs with colorful flowers. The birds are not the only ones flying in to see this oasis. 'There are not many wild places on earth anymore, and this is a wild place and a spectacular place,' Kingsford says. 'Quite clearly, these floods bring many local and international visitors to see this phenomenon. 'It does trigger a tremendous tourism boom.' The influx of visitors hasn't been without growing pains as the area adapts to its newfound popularity. In February, the South Australian government announced a new ban on people walking on the lake bed, both to protect the fragile salt crust and surface, and to prevent injuries in a remote place where medical help is not always close at hand. The ban also supports the cultural practices of the Arabana people, who consider the lake sacred. But according to a recent report by Australian public broadcaster ABC, people continue to venture out onto the lake bed due to a lack of signage highlighting the rule. The government has said it will add new signage and visitor infrastructure to the area soon. To serve the tourist market, operators like Phil van Wegen dedicate themselves to a life in Australia's remote outback. Marree, a town south of Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre, is where van Wegen runs Arid Air, a flight company that takes tourists for joyrides over the huge lake on Cessna propeller planes. 'The flight, the route that we do, just blows people away,' he says. To him, the desert is 'vast, forever changing and spectacular.' 'So if anyone's got any ambition to come and see it, Marree is a relatively easy shot. We're only about 700 kilometers (435 miles) out of Adelaide and its bitumen all the way to the front door,' van Wegen assures. The Ghan train line ran through Maree up until the 1980s, ensuring a 'bumbling busy little town,' van Wegen says. Now he's one of 50 to 60 people who live there and believes it's the vast distances that help to keep Kati-Thanda Lake Eyre pristine. 'It's lucky that it's just so remote, you know, and it's so far from anywhere that it just doesn't get touched or tapped or anything. That's its own self-preservation.' That does not mean Kati-Thanda Lake Eyre is without its protectors. Conservationists Annemarie van Doorn and Luke Playford watch over the region like sentinels. Together, the pair manage the Kalamurina Wildlife Sanctuary, a 679,667-hectare property owned by the Australian Wildlife Conservancy on the eastern shore of the lake. The vastness of their world can only truly be understood from the helicopter they use to do their conservation work. The property they alone are responsible for is the size of Delaware. When the area is dry, and the roads are open, they can get to the nearest supermarket — a nine-hour drive away in the South Australian town of Port Augusta. Now, however, the floodwaters have cut off the dirt roads that link them to civilization. They'll stay in their desert home, trapped by water for months, possibly through the rest of the year. The Royal Flying Doctor Service lands once a month to check in on them. 'You just see nothing around you. It's so, so quiet,' Van Doorn tells CNN by phone. 'There's no light pollution, there's no noise. And you look up and there's a dingo walking around on the sand dune, and you think, 'how lucky are we?',' she says. 'Then there's other times where you've got flies crawling up your nose and in your eyes, and it's 48 degrees Celsius (118 degrees Fahrenheit), and you think, 'wow, this is pretty miserable,' but you're doing it for a great cause.' The couple's great cause is keeping a pristine environment that way. That largely involves keeping a lid on the population of feral animals such as wild boar and camels. Around two-thirds of the water that flows into Kati-Thanda Lake Eyre passes through Kalamurina, and the couple will watch life transform their barren world. 'This is special because it's a natural event,' Playford says. 'It's the largest flood in 50 years, and while that did a lot of damage in Queensland, this is an act that's not induced by climate change. It's a special occasion.' 'A good news story,' van Doorn adds. 'There is hope out there.' That hope is shared by ecologist Kingsford, who will join tourists, conservationists and other scientists in hours of outback road and air travel to catch a glimpse of a desert turned temporarily fecund. 'I'm a conservation biologist, and so it's often depressing to look at the world and what we're doing to it, and this gives me incredible optimism to be able to see this system still going through its natural rhythms in such a spectacular way.'

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