A NSW Government website

Bellinger River

Our water quality monitoring program has shown the Bellinger River estuary to have excellent water quality. Find out more about the estuary and its unique features.

Bellinger River is situated on the mid-north coast of New South Wales and meets the sea near Urunga.

Bellinger River estuary is a barrier river estuary. The lower estuary is formed where the Kalang River merges with the Bellinger River, creating a large and dynamic system. There is a southern training wall at the entrance that maintains a permanent channel to the sea. Other training walls have been constructed further upstream where the 2 rivers converge.

Water quality report card

As part of our water quality monitoring program we assess the water quality and ecosystem health of an estuary using a range of relevant indicators. We sample a subset of the estuaries located between the Queensland border and Taree every 3 years. The most recent sampling in the Bellinger River was completed over the 2021–22 summer, when 2 sites were sampled on a monthly basis.

This report card represents 2 water quality indicators that we routinely measure: the amount of algae present and water clarity. Low levels of these 2 indicators equate with good water quality.

A

Algae

B

Water clarity

A

Overall grade

The report card shows the condition of the estuary was excellent with:

  • algae abundance graded excellent (A)
  • water clarity graded good (B)
  • overall estuary health graded excellent (A).

Grades for algae, water clarity and overall are represented as: 

  • A – excellent 
  • B – good 
  • C – fair 
  • D – poor 
  • E – very poor.

Go to estuary report cards to find out what each grade means, read our sampling, data analysis and reporting protocols, and find out how we calculate these grades.

A view of the Bellinger river meeting the sea near the coastal town Urunga

Aerial review of Bellinger River estuary.

Seafood harvest area status

The NSW Food Authority website lists the current status of oyster/shellfish harvest areas.

Local government management

Local councils manage estuaries within their area unless the estuary is attached to a marine park.

Bellinger River is managed by Bellingen Shire Council. Information about the Bellinger River estuary can be found on the council’s Coast and waterways webpage.

Threatened species

Many threatened species live in the Bellinger River catchment including the Bellinger River snapping turtle, the curlew sandpiper and the beach stone-curlew.

Read more about the biodiversity in our estuaries.