The lake is mostly situated within a A class nature reserve and is one of a few relatively fresh permanent, large waterbodies that are valuable as a wildlife refuge. It is located close to but is not part of Arthur River. It forms part of the Towerrining Lake and Moodiarrup Swamps Important Bird Area and the Arthur River Wetlands System within the Blackwood basin. The lake has a catchment area of and has an average rainfall of per annum and an evaporation rate of per annum. It is found along the upper part of a major drainage line where a paleochannel is likely to be present. Water enters the lake via an inlet swamp found to the north west and drains out, eventually reaching the Arthur River, through an outlet swamp on the southern side of the lake. The landscape of the catchment is a mixture of low hills, gently undulating rises, narrow incised valleys and wide flats with duplex sandy gravelly soils and clay soils on the valley floors.
History
The traditional owners of the area are the Noongar peoples, who have inhabited the country for tens of thousands of years. The lake and its surroundings are spiritually and culturally significant to the Noongar as a corroboree ground and camping and meeting place with good hunting grounds. The first European to visit the site was Thomas Bannister while exploring the area in 1832 and who described it as a "rushy lagoon". Lands around the lake were being rapidly selected by farmers for cropping or pastoralism in 1909. The lake was bordered by a property owned by T.V.Williams in 1926. The last recorded Indigenous Australian settlement was in 1938 when temporary camps were constructed to find bush foods. As a result of clearing the lake became larger through the 1940s with extra run-off but started to become saline in the 1960s. In 1982 a caravan park, located near the southern shore line, commenced operations. In 1989 the Lake Towerrinning catchment landcare group formed with a mission to improve water quality. In 1993 the construction of a lake re-diversion at the confluence of the Cordering and Morlup Creeks to the northwest of the lake was completed to allow diverting of fresher water into the lake from the catchment area and saline water away from the lake.
Facilities
The lake has many facilities, including two jetties, a boat ramp, public toilets, change rooms, playground, barbeques, camping and picnic areas. Water skiing is permitted on the lake between sunrise and sunset but is prohibited within of the shore except within the designated water ski takeoff and landing areas.
Wildlife
Flora
Much of the land around the catchment has been cleared for agriculture. The catchment belongs to the Beaufort Vegetation System, where marri and wandoo dominate in undulating areas while swamp yate is more common in the valleys. The woodlands surrounding the main body of water contain wandoo, flooded gums, rock sheoak, acorn banksia, freshwater paper bark, saltwater paperbark, saltwater sheoak, species of samphire and pockets of marri trees. The only recorded native aquatic plant is Ruppia megacarpa. Grasses and sedges found around the lake include Baumea articulata, Baumea juncea, Lepidosperma longitudinale, Juncus kraussii, Juncus pallidus, Hordeum geniculatum and Paspalum vaginatum.
Fauna
The area is an important habitat for a large range of species, including 14 species of frog, 43 species of reptile, 171 species of bird and 23 species of mammal. It is a wildlife refuge that supports a large population of birds, both local and migratory. The lake is recognised as an Important Bird Area by BirdLife Australia for the population of blue-billed ducks it supports. Other birds that can be seen are Australasian bittern, black cockatoo, peregrine falcon and the eastern great egret. Many reptile species have also been recorded around the lake, including the long-necked tortoise.