• About Us
  • Advertising
  • Support Us
  • Contact Us
  • Community
  • Politics
  • Art & Culture
  • Local Business
  • Environment
Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn
The Tawny Frogmouth
  • About Us
  • Advertising
  • Support Us
  • Contact Us
  • Community
  • Politics
  • Art & Culture
  • Local Business
  • Environment
The Tawny Frogmouth
Home » Online Articles » The Galaxias miracle of Manly Dam
Environment

The Galaxias miracle of Manly Dam

Malcolm FisherBy Malcolm FisherMay 30, 20223 Mins Read
It may seem fishy, but this is what a truly experienced rock climber looks like

A unique Climbing Fish population, so old their ancestors shared the Earth with dinosaurs, is set for extinction thanks to an Allambie DA approval.

Andrew Lo grew up amidst the concrete sprawl of Hong Kong but discovered a passion for Australian nature after emigrating here in the 1960s. He loved fossicking around the creeks of Manly Dam and became fascinated by native freshwater fish.

One day he observed a species that looked particularly unusual. It was “scaleless, cylindrical in shape, with gold flake adorning its dorsal side, had bright reddish orange fins and a body marked with chevron patterns”. He collected a specimen for the Australian Museum to identify in 1995. They confirmed, in amazement, that it was a Climbing Galaxias fish – something that existed nowhere else in Greater Sydney.

One moonlit evening, I joined Andrew, plus a photographer and journalist from the Sydney Morning Herald, and we searched for the fish by torchlight (the best way to see them). At the start of the assignment, the cameraman looked thoroughly bored and was smoking furtively to keep himself awake. Hours later we literally struggled to drag him away…such was the charisma of this little creature. I too was hooked on conservation from that point.

Andrew became quite a celebrity, appearing on a number of TV shows such as “Totally Wild”. His message was always the same, “To protect the fish you have to protect the water catchment”.

The Climbing Galaxias is fascinating in a number of ways. It can wriggle hundreds of metres upstream over steep, slippery rocks using its pectoral fins; it absorbs oxygen through its skin, and it’s been around for circa 90 million years – since dinosaurs ruled the earth! 

Historically the Galaxias would have spent half of their life cycle in the ocean. But, after the unscaleable Manly Dam wall was built in 1890s the population became land-locked and somehow, managed to adapt their breeding patterns. The fish hunt for larvae, shrimps and beetles by sight so they require crystal clear water and are intolerant of the slightest muddying or change in pH levels. And therein lies the problem.

The Land and Environment Court recently granted (on appeal) permission for Allambie Heights Village Ltd to construct 24 luxury units on leased crown land adjoining Manly Warringah War Memorial Park. This is despite a DA twice being refused by Northern Beaches Council and the Local Planning Panel and well over a hundred community submissions pleading for the development not to proceed. The site incorporates the fragile water catchment and sits above the last solitary creek where the Galaxias is found.

Major construction in a sensitive area, which also involves bulldozing swathes of bushland does not auger well for the Galaxias. Manly Dam (the last swimmable freshwater lake in Sydney) will itself be at dire risk from pollution.

Since Andrew’s original discovery, the fish has been seen as an indicator for the ecological health of the catchment and championed by the local community as deserving protection. Currently 2,000 Australian plants and animals are on the threatened species list, and we lead the world in extinction. The moral of the story is that our environmental protection and planning laws are far too weak to safeguard biodiversity.

Northern Beaches Council did not conduct any aquatic surveys for the Development Application and currently has NO management or recovery plans for the Climbing Galaxias.

Conservation Issue 17 Mal's Wild Side Manly Dam Save Manly Dam
Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email

Related Posts

Bull sharks, balance, and the future of Australia’s oceans

Manly Surf School: Front foot, safety first

An inside view of the Manly Krill Oil protest

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Stories from Past Tawnies

Cover artist… Chris Mercer

February 28, 2022

Let there be Rock

February 25, 2022

Colormaker commissions new Revolve® battery

November 28, 2023

A Time Capsule Unearthed

March 25, 2022

Hard to be alone? A loneliness survival guide

July 20, 2023

Warriewood SLSC launches ‘Dippers’ for children with Autism

February 27, 2024

Howl good! Reliving the Manly Wolves best year

October 29, 2025

Grow your own food with Vegepod

August 28, 2022

A volunteer run legal service everyone can rely on

October 1, 2022

The micro artillery that ensures parents win the nutrition wars 

April 26, 2022

Sydney Wildlife Rescue’s Mobile Care Unit

September 4, 2023

History is calling: We can create a better future

June 25, 2023

Roving Larder: A culinary journey

November 25, 2024

There’s more to Bluebottles than you’d think…

March 1, 2025

Behind the scenes at Lifeline’s Brookvale Book Depot

July 31, 2024
Our Mag

Online Articles

Back Issues

Media

Advertising

Advertising

Media Kit

Say Hi!

Contact Us

Support Us

Tip Jar

Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn
© 2026 The Tawny Frogmouth

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.