Lake Lorne

Lake Lorne, a small 12-hectare (30-acre) freshwater lake on the Bellarine Peninsula, Victoria, Australia, is located immediately south-west of the township of Drysdale.

Lake Lorne
A map of Victoria, Australia, with a mark indicating the location of Lake Lorne
A map of Victoria, Australia, with a mark indicating the location of Lake Lorne
Lake Lorne
Location in Victoria
LocationBellarine Peninsula, Victoria
Coordinates38°10′55″S 144°33′29″E[1]
TypeFreshwater
Basin countriesAustralia
Surface area12 ha (30 acres)
Surface elevation62 m (203 ft)
View across lake to Drysdale Railway Station.

Location and features

The lake is a popular birdwatching site and is well known for its variety of waterbirds, many of which have been recorded as breeding there. Lake Lorne lies in a depression in the underlying limestone and has no surface outlet. Water levels may vary substantially, often with a lag time in response to rainfall, with the nearby McLeods Waterholes being part of the same hydrological system. It contains a central complex of three islets densely vegetated with willows, eucalypts, paperbarks and pittosporums. The lake is largely surrounded by parkland and is close to the Drysdale railway station.

Birds

The lake is important for freckled and blue-billed ducks which are listed as threatened in Victoria. Waterbirds, waders and rails which have bred at the lake include black swans, hardheads, musk ducks, Australasian and hoary-headed grebes, darters, little pied and little black cormorants, dusky moorhens, purple swamphens, Eurasian coots and black-fronted dotterels. It is also a roosting site for hundreds of cormorants and ibises.[2][3]

References

  1. "Lake Lorne". Vicnames. Government of Victoria. 2 May 1966. Archived from the original on 6 June 2014. Retrieved 4 June 2014.
  2. Hewish, Marilyn (2002). "New information on the birds of Lake Lorne, Drysdale, 1997-2002". Geelong Bird Report. 2001: 89–95. ISSN 1323-2681.
  3. King, Dave; Cameron, Margaret (1997). "The birds of Lake Lorne, Drysdale". Geelong Bird Report. 1996: 32–39. ISSN 1323-2681.


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