The fences are very low (less than 40 cm high) and made of shade-cloth fine enough to prevent even baby Gambusia from passing through.
“This part isn’t easy – digging trenches, straining wires, hammering in posts, sometimes through extremely rocky ground, clipping on the shade cloth and then re-burying the trench,” said Dean.
Another unlikely tool in Dean’s fight for the Red-finned Blue-eye – fire.
“To manage the vegetation, National Fire Program Officer, Alistair Hartley came out in April and helped us burn a few springs to remove the really dense, thick grass thatch and expose all the surface water.”
Done properly, controlled burning can rejuvenate biodiversity, according to Dean, benefiting the endemic and threatened spring plants being smothered by the grasses and reeds, which in turn benefits the health of the springs.
“Next step, also relying on volunteers, is to use whipper snippers and brush cutters to trim the last of the vegetation that’s covering the surface of the water – we need to be able to see every puddle that’s left, as Gambusia can inhabit a puddle the size of a boot print,” said Dean.
“Then we temporarily remove as much of the surface water as we can from the spring using pumps. Luckily, the springs are very resilient to disturbance and they do recover,” he said.