Jun 242013
 

WetlandCare AustraliaOriginal story at WetlandCare Australia: Delivering Biodiversity Dividends for the Barratta Creek Catchment

WetlandCare Australia, with support through funding from the Australian Government’s Clean Energy Future Biodiversity Fund, will protect, manage and enhance the high ecological functional values of the Barratta Creek Catchment which forms the main artery of the Bowling Green Bay wetlands, the only Ramsar site in north Queensland.

Wetlands on agricultural farms are an intergral part of sustainable land management in the Barrattas. Photo: WetlandCare Australia

Wetlands on agricultural farms are an intergral part of sustainable land management in the Barrattas. Photo: WetlandCare Australia

 

Barratta Creek is one of the most high integrity floodplain creek systems on the developed east coast of Queensland. Since the introduction of intensive irrigated agriculture the creek and wetlands have suffered serious impacts through a lack of active management and understanding including invasive aquatic and terrestrial weeds, hot frequent fires regimes and excessive and nutrient rich tailwater flows.WetlandCare Australia will unite multiple stakeholders to improve biodiversity outcomes in the Barratta Creek catchment and internationally listed Ramsar wetlands through integrated catchment based management.

Jun 242013
 

WetlandCare AustraliaOriginal story at WetlandCare Australia: Helping Hands Improve Wetland Habitat at Pasturage Reserve

WetlandCare Australia have worked in partnership with Bundaberg Regional Council, Friends of Pasturage Reserve, Bundaberg Landcare, Gidarjil rangers, the local Impact team and the Bargara Lions Club to undertake the planting of 950 local native trees at Pasturage Reserve.

Pasturage Reserve, adjoining the coastal village of Bargara, is one of the 20 important wetlands targeted for environmental restoration works under WetlandCare Australia’s $2.5 million Coastal 20 wetlands restoration project, funded under the Australian Government’s Caring for our Country program. The area is of high conservation value because it contains one of the few melaleuca swamp remnants along the Burnett-Elliott coast and provides habitat for threatened species.

WetlandCare Australia staff, Gidarjil Rangers, Impact team members and Landcare volunteers worked together to plant over 950 native trees at Pasturage Reserve last week.

WetlandCare Australia staff, Gidarjil Rangers, Impact team members and Landcare volunteers worked together to plant over 950 native trees at Pasturage Reserve last week.

Bundaberg Council and the local Impact team had done a fantastic job of preparing the site prior to the planting day on Wednesday 17th April. Over 950 wetland seedlings had been carefully propagated by the Bundaberg Landcare nursery and the willing and capable hands of the Gidarjil ranger group, Impact team and Landcare volunteers along with WetlandCare Australia staff made fast work of getting the young plants carefully installed into their new surroundings. The hard-working team was sustained by a BBQ lunch kindly provided and prepared by the Bargara Lions Club.

The success of the tree planting event was a direct result of a strong collaboration between the partner organisations and the local community. Adam Gosling, Regional Coordinator at WetlandCare Australia, said “This is a great example of what can be achieved when everyone works together towards a common goal. WetlandCare Australia could not have achieved such a great result without the collaboration and support of these groups and local community”

This successful planting project will increase coastal native vegetation and habitat, enhancing the existing remnant paperbark and estuarine vegetation communities at Pasturage Reserve. Revegetation of the area will also reduce the impacts of invasive weed species and will improve water quality to the adjacent important turtle breeding areas.                                                                                                                            

For more information on the Coastal 20 project please contact:

Laura White

Senior Project Officer

02 6681 6169

laurawhite@wetlandcare.com.au

Jun 222013
 

Original story: Narromine News

Fisheries Education Officer Stephen Thurstan said the Department of Primary Industries was calling out for people to join the successful Fishcare Volunteer Program, which had in excess of 300 volunteers State-wide.

Volunteer undertaking biology training, Cronulla

Volunteer undertaking biology training, Cronulla

“The program is run using funds from the NSW Recreational Fishing Trust as part of the NSW Government’s commitment to sustainable recreational fishing and habitat conservation,” Mr Thurstan said.

“Fishcare volunteers play a vital role in promoting responsible fishing practices, and do a terrific job in advising anglers about the rules and values of sustainable recreational fishing in NSW at events, such as fishing competitions, shows and field days, children’s fishing workshops and the ‘Get Hooked It’s fun to fish’ schools program, passing on their knowledge and skills, and encouraging values that ensure there will be fish for the future.

“It is estimated more than a million people fish in NSW at least once a year - this makes angling the most popular of all the recreational activities.

“And that’s why we are so grateful and appreciative of the hard work our Fishcare volunteers do.”

The NSW Fishcare Volunteer program has been running for 12 years and volunteers help with a range of activities.

“Volunteers can also assist a number of community groups with fishing activities such as high schools with fishing for sport, retiree organisations, indigenous communities and several special needs groups,” Mr Thurstan said.

“All of this would not be possible without our amazing volunteers. The yearly training is planned for July 27-28 (at a location to be set) and will encompass both fresh and saltwater information sessions.”

Mr Thurstan said they were seeking people, over the age of 18, who had a keen interest in fishing, and liked to listen and share information with the angling public.

Distributing regulation material on Sydney Harbour

Distributing regulation material on Sydney Harbour

“Volunteers come from a wide background, quite a few are retirees, others may be looking for an experience that will enhance their employment opportunities and some are keen to improve fishing habitat,” he said.

“You don’t have to be an expert on all the fishing rules but you should know how to help others look them up.

“The training includes presentations and break-out sessions by NSW DPI staff and guest speakers about the NSW recreational fishing licence fee, NSW fishing rules and regulations, conservation and habitat, catch-and-release techniques, fisheries research, the volunteer codes of practice, NSW DPI policies and communication skills.”

There is also an accredited TAFE training component in fish biology and identifying fish species. At the end of the workshop participants will receive a statement of attainment from TAFE NSW.

Volunteers do not have any enforcement powers.

For more information download a nomination form fromhttp://www.dpi.nsw.gov.au/fisheries/recreational/info/fvp#Want-to-apply?

Jun 222013
 

The ConversationOriginal story by Brad Farrant, University of Western Australia; David Holmes, Monash University, and Mark G Edwards, University of Western Australia at The Conversation

Australian media failures promote climate policy inaction

Four months ago, the big media proprietors were fighting proposed federal government press reforms, arguing that “the press” needs freedom if it is to defend the public interest. But these arguments were raised only to defend the media’s system of self-regulation. What was absent then, and since, was any demonstration that Australia’s news media hold politicians morally accountable on the public issues that really do matter. The most pressing example is climate change.

Australia’s media culture gets in the way of asking politicians serious questions about climate change. AAP Image/Dean Lewins

Australia’s media culture gets in the way of asking politicians serious questions about climate change. AAP Image/Dean Lewins

The science is clear. Over 97% of climate scientists and every major national science academy agree that the planet is warming due to human activity. Leading public health organisations and prestigious peer-reviewed journals have recognised that “Climate change is the biggest global health threat of the 21st century”.

Why are they getting away with it?

In our previous articles we focussed on the (un)ethical position of politicians who don’t accept the science of climate change, or won’t act on it. But what about the journalists who should be holding them to account?

You would think most journalists would be forensically questioning any politician who denied the science or failed to devise and support adequate policies to address this threat.

Unfortunately very few, if any, of our mainstream journalists have ever really challenged climate-science-denying politicians.

In fact the opposite has been true. According to research by Robert Manne, many major media outlets – notably the Murdoch media, and particularly The Australian – have actively created doubt about the science. They have misreported the science and supported inaction among politicians who should be developing climate policies and offering national and international leadership on the issue.

The news media have largely failed to cover the science and the solutions to the problems it raises. A report on coverage of the carbon price by the Australian Centre for Independent Journalism (University of Technology, Sydney) said that some major Australian newspapers were “so biased in their coverage that it is fair to say they ‘campaigned’ against the policy rather than covered it”.

The number of environmental journalists in Australian newspapers has declined, leaving the ABC and pockets of Fairfax as the only outlets to tackle climate change politics and science. This is a significant problem in Australia that has broad implications for national and international efforts to combat dangerous climate change.

Recent analyses of the statements made by our federal politicians have found that a large number of MPs and Senators have publicly denied the findings of climate science. Around half of all coalition MPs and over two thirds of coalition Senators have publicly denied the science. Because the overwhelming majority of the science-deniers are from the Liberal and National parties, the failure of the press to hold them to account becomes a major political and anti-science bias by the media.

More insidious than outright denial of the science is a new form of denial where the science is accepted but where the need for carbon pricing and government intervention and regulation is denied. This appears to be the current position of the Federal coalition. Again this goes almost completely unchallenged. This is media bias in the form of silence and failing to adequately scrutinise politicians’ claims. Why aren’t journalists scrutinising politicians when they claim that they “support the science”? Why aren’t they assessing the ability of climate policies to do what the political proponents claim they can do and whether they are capable of being scaled up to deliver the emission reductions that are required to prevent dangerous climate change?

Can you imagine if we had a large group of politicians who accepted the science supporting the life-saving benefits of vaccination programs but denied the role of governments in legislating for child vaccination?

Given that they have a duty to ensure public policy is based on scientific evidence, why is it that journalists haven’t questioned and challenged climate science-denying and policy-free politicians to explain their positions on scientific and ethical grounds?

The culture of Australian media

That such positions can be held but not defended while the science itself is attacked in Australia says much about the culture of commercial media in this country.

As in the US (according to Pew) most Australians get their news from commercial TV (see page 9 of the Convergence Review). This format is suited to reporting live events, violence and conflict but not to the background needed for understanding big, global issues like climate change. Even when extreme weather events are covered, the dramatised suffering of individuals – rather than big-picture science – is highlighted.

This kind of news is all that politicians feel obliged to respond to, as they do their routine overflights of disaster zones and give nationalistic speeches about how Australians always pull together in a crisis.

In Germany, by contrast, where newspapers (in print or online) have traditionally been the most important news source, climate change policy features much more than it does in Australia and the US.

The enormous concentration of media ownership in Australia limits the diversity of reporting needed to cover climate change in depth. One company – News Ltd – controls 72% of capital city newspaper circulation. The same commercial values that legitimate this kind of monopoly in news (which also exists in the coal and energy industries) are unlikely to be challenged by journalists.

For example, business editors at News Ltd have long run the line that Australia’s coal industry (its associated jobs and balance of trade) would be hurt if politicians allowed climate change science to govern investment regulation. In the face of this, it has taken an international social movement like 350.org to initiate a divestment campaign in Australia, rather than the issue being chased by the media.

As the level of global emissions continues to increase and the urgency for real change grows, the atmospheric concentration of carbon dioxide has gone above 400 parts per million for the first time in millions of years

Yet Australia continues to avoid committing to the steep reductions in greenhouse gas emissions that are required to avoid dangerous climate change. The current bipartisan national emissions reductions targets (e.g., 5% by 2020) mean that Australians will use four times as much of the carbon budget as the average global citizen, making us a nation of emissions bludgers and hurtling the world ever closer to climate disruption.

What will future generations think about the climate science-denying media bias of today and the failure of Australia’s journalists to seriously challenge the group of science-denying leaders and politicians?

David Holmes receives funding from Monash University Faculty of Arts for research into climate change communication.

Brad Farrant and Mark G Edwards do not work for, consult to, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article. They also have no relevant affiliations.

The Conversation

This article was originally published at The Conversation.
Read the original article.

Jun 212013
 
Junior Philanthropist Award winner Tegan Lather. Photo courtesy of her mum, Kathy Lather.

Junior Philanthropist Award winner Tegan Lather. Photo courtesy of her mum, Kathy Lather.

Original story by Tim Pasqualone, ourbribie.com: Bribie Island teen awarded Junior Philanthropist 2013

Queensland’s top philanthropists have been honoured at the annual Philanthropist Awards in Brisbane including an award for a young Bribie Island teen.

The recipients were recognised for their constant commitment to giving, having raised thousands of dollars across a number of areas including health, education, sport and the environment.

Bribie Island teen and wildlife warrior, Tegan Lather won the Junior Philanthropist Award. The 13-year-old has been an Australia Zoo Wildlife Warriors Joey Ambassador for the past two years, and has already raised more than $40,000 for the charity’s major project, the Australia Zoo Wildlife Hospital.

Tegan has made it her goal to raise more than $100,000 for wildlife conservation before finishing year 12. She is also an active fundraiser for a number of drives and fundraising activities in her local community.

Queensland Philanthropy Week 2013 is organised by the Queensland Community Foundation (QCF), a state-based and focused trust fund with 185 charitable sub-funds including more than 90 well-known charities under its umbrella. QCF encourages giving to perpetual funds to ensure a sustainable income stream for Queensland’s non-profits.

For more go to Pro Bono Australia.

Jun 202013
 

Original story by Matthew Cawood, Queensland Country Life

FOCUS, and then more focus - that's the key to one of the country's most awarded natural resource management organisations, the Condamine Alliance.

Carl Mitchell, Manager Water and Phil McCullough, CEO with the United National World Environment Day trophy, Riverprize trophy and Banksia Award trophy.

Carl Mitchell, Manager Water and Phil McCullough, CEO with the United National World Environment Day trophy, Riverprize trophy and Banksia Award trophy.

The Alliance last week carried off the 2013 United Nations Association of Australia World Environment Day Award for Biodiversity, which comes on the heels of the 2012 Australian Riverprize and 2012 Banksia Award for Water late last year.

The Alliance's goal is to restore the Queensland river system’s health and increase native fish populations to 60 per cent of pre-European settlement levels by 2050.

Chief executive Phil McCullough thinks the organisation and its partners are already halfway there along 500km of the river, and he speculates that it might be possible to get most of the way to the Alliance's goal within another decade.

This sort of progress is a dream for many NRM organisations. So what's the Alliance's secret sauce?

First, Mr McCullough said, it has to be acknowledged that no NRM organisation can do it all.

"We picked six focus areas across the catchment, and then we went on to focus on areas within those focus areas," Mr McCullough said.

"When you focus in on an area so that you get some results in small ways, that's when you start to get traction. You can then start to build on those successes and turn them into big strategic things.

"It's about what you can fix today that will have a benefit tomorrow."

Focus also means ignoring some pressing issues in favour of the task at hand.

"Concerns about gas and mining could easily take over what we're doing, but in the end you have to focus on what you want to do. In our case, that's bringing this magnificent river back to some degree of health."

Getting the whole community engaged with the process is one of the biggest challenges for the Alliance, as for any NRM group, and one of the areas where it is most necessary to succeed.

Rather than "forcing the journey on people", Condamine Alliance "allows them to be involved".

"Farmers live in communities," Mr McCullogh said, "and the last thing we want is to have them ostracised from their communities because they have been tagged as environmentalists or greenies when the mainstream in their communities is talking about loss of productivity.

"The last thing we do is go out and tell them that we have a solution. That's where you need good officers to go out and have a conversation. They need to understand what farmers are going through - the person needs to appreciate how these projects are going to affect the farmers' own time and effort."

The Alliance also talks to that overlooked farm demographic, children, who take their own perspectives home to their parents.

The United National World Environment Day trophy, Riverprize trophy and Banksia Award trophy.

The United National World Environment Day trophy, Riverprize trophy and Banksia Award trophy.

Once farmers have started on some small projects, Mr McCullough said their momentum tends to carry them into bigger endeavours.

"You've got to really find out what makes your community hum, and get it humming. Once you've identified that, you can keep it going. You can't exactly retrofit what we've done here to other communities."

Condamine Alliance doesn't do things on its own, either. It's part of a network of people and organisations, who collectively help keep the funding coming in.

"You get some hard knocks, and you get some wins, and you have to roll with both," Mr McCullough reflected.

"It's not all peaches and cream most of the time. There's a lot of effort that goes into making change occur."

The Alliance learned early on that while success is sweet, it's not always a good idea to talk about it.

"A few years ago we were so excited about bringing some of these big cod back that we advertised the fact," Mr McCullogh said.

"The Fisheries guys later pulled out a whole heap of nets from that stretch. You have to be careful about what you do."

Jun 192013
 

Original story by Nathalie Fernbach with Kim Kleidon, ABC Capricornia

How do you feel about the reef? Jeremy Goldberg - supplied

How do you feel about the reef?
Jeremy Goldberg - supplied

Chemical runoff, coral bleaching, fish populations, there are plenty of studies being done to check up on the health of the Great Barrier Reef.

But there's a gap in knowledge about the human side of the reef - the views of the locals and visitors who interact with it or make their living from it.

James Cook University and CSIRO are working together to fill this gap by interviewing more than 5000 people about their perception of, use of and feelings about the reef.

"We have decades and decades of information about the fish, the corals all of the actual animals that live out in the ocean," says researcher Jeremy Goldberg.

"But we lack a really comprehensive analysis or information about the entire Great Barrier Reef about the people about what they think, what they feel, what they value about the Great Barrier Reef," he says.

Four teams of researchers will quiz visitors and locals in Cairns and Cooktown, Mackay and the Whitsundays, Townsville and Bowen and Rockhampton and Gladstone.

Additional research will target commercial fishers and tourism operators to gain their perspectives too.

Mr Goldberg says he has been surprised and encouraged by the passion that people have for the reef.

"It is really rewarding for me personally to go and talk to just the general public to hear their stories and hear the emotion that it just brings out in them," he said.

Findings will be delivered to reef mangers, businesses and government to help them make decisions about the future of the reef.

"We are going to have a giant database with loads of information and it is going to be our job as scientists to try to tease out the key messages to try to tell people what we have found and why," says Mr Goldberg.

It is hoped the findings will be available by the end of 2013.

Find out more about the study on the CSIRO website.

Jun 172013
 

IPSWICH councillor Heather Morrow could not have picked a more ideal day to reopen the new- look Environmental Education Centre.

HARD WORK: Cr Heather Morrow and council volunteer Murray Kruger at the newly renovated Queens Park Environmental Centre. Rob Williams

HARD WORK: Cr Heather Morrow and council volunteer Murray Kruger at the newly renovated Queens Park Environmental Centre. Rob Williams

Located in the heart of the Queens Park, the venue has served as a place for Ipswich residents to discover and learn about their natural environment.

After two weeks of being closed for maintenance and the upgrade of displays, the centre opened it doors again yesterday, in line with World Environment Day.

Cr Morrow, the Environment and Conservation Committee chairperson, said the objective of the new centre was to encourage a feeling of "bringing outdoors in and indoors out through engaging and interacting displays".

She said the goal had been achieved through the use of recycled materials, beautiful picturesque displays and obscure household structures representing features typical of a Queensland home.

Cr Morrow said the display hoped to visually illustrate how we lived within the environment and our impact on it.

"The aim of this display to inspire visitors to do their best to live sustainably and to appreciate the natural environment Ipswich has to offer," she said.

"Hopefully, residents can have a look at some of the things being done here and see if they can replicate that in their own lives."

The new display was brought to life through the collaboration of local staff, tradesmen, suppliers and artists who worked tirelessly to complete the display.

"Projects of this magnitude are successful through the hard work of a number of individuals working together to reach a shared goal," Cr Morrow said.

Cr Heather Morrow and Council volunteer Murray Kruger at the newly renovated Queen's Park Environmental Centre. Rob Williams

Cr Heather Morrow and Council volunteer Murray Kruger at the newly renovated Queen's Park Environmental Centre. Rob Williams

Some of the features include a video microscope, instillation artwork, an aquarium display and interactive educational displays.

As well as coinciding with World Environment Day, the reopening also commemorated the fourth birthday of the centre.

The Environmental Education Centre is open seven days a week from 9.30am to 4pm.

For more information phone council on 3810 6666.

Jun 152013
 

If you've got some top notch fish that'd you'd like to show the world, or you'd like to give your aquascaping skills a shot, or you just want to have a shot at getting some prize money from your hobby... Get in quick, entries for the 2013 pisciculture competiton at the Ekka close on Wednesday (19/6/2013). You can enter online here.

2012 show champion from Peter Ford. Don't let him win again this year!

2012 show champion from Peter Ford. Don't let him win again this year! Photo: QFAS

Jun 142013
 

Original story by Liam Cochrane, Australia Network News

With its wealth of precious metals underground, Bougainville is a treasure island. Bougainville's Panguna mine is one of the richest copper mines in the world. Photo: ABC

With its wealth of precious metals underground, Bougainville is a treasure island. Bougainville's Panguna mine is one of the richest copper mines in the world. Photo: ABC

The newly-elected representative for landowner groups around Papua New Guinea’s Panguna mine on Bougainville says addressing the historic demands for 10 billion kina (A$4.5 billion) compensation will be a key part of his negotiations.

Lawrence Daveona is the new chairman of the Umbrella Panguna Landowners Association, representing six groups affected by the giant copper and gold mine.

He has told Radio Australia's Pacific Beat that while it’s highly unlikely any company will pay the 10 billion kina up front, it must be addressed as part of a wider agreement.

"That will come as a pre-condition to any negotiation talks," he said.

The Panguna copper and gold mine on PNG’s Bougainville island was shut down in 1989, amid a civil war led by opponents of the mine.

Negotiations to re-open Panguna have struggled, due in part to disunity amongst the various communities living near the mine, roads and port.