RAiD 10.71613/50b45047
NESP RL Project 1.2 - Strengthening resilience to threatening processes and extreme events

Dates

Start Date
01-Jul-2021
End Date
31-Dec-2026

Titles

Title
NESP RL Project 1.2 - Strengthening resilience to threatening processes and extreme events
Title Type
Primary
Title Type:
Primary
Preferred full description or abstract.
Start Date
01-Jul-2021
End Date
31-Dec-2026
Language
English

Descriptions

Description

Australian ecosystems and species face many threatening processes that contribute to biodiversity decline. These include:

  • altered hydrology such as water extraction
  • altered fire regimes
  • extreme floods, droughts and bushfires
  • diseases
  • invasive plants and animals.

The Australian Government aims to reduce the impacts of these threatening processes. This requires good policies, integrated planning and on-ground management, based on the best available evidence.

This project establishes the foundation for the hub’s research on building resilience to threatening processes, and considers landscape-scale interactions among these processes.

Description Type

Primary

Description Type:

Primary

Preferred full description or abstract
Language
English
Description

Key research areas

  • environmental weeds and diseases
  • invasive animals
  • bushfire management
  • wetlands and water management.
Description Type

Other

Description Type:

Other

Any other descriptive information, e.g. a note or similar.
Language
English
Description

Monitoring traditional oola (freshwater) places on Bardi Jawi Country

This collaborative project was developed to foster Indigenous Traditional Owner and Elder assessments of wetland health on Bardi Jawi Country in the Kimberley region of north-western Australia. The project was led by the Bardi Jawi Rangers (men’s and women’s teams) and Traditional Owners and Elders, working with a range of collaborators including University of Western Australia hub researchers, Environs Kimberley (the peak environmental organisation for the Kimberley) and a Māori researcher dedicated to developing wetland health assessments by Māori iwi (tribes).

This action-research project developed and implemented a wetland monitoring program within the context of Healthy Country Planning, the method adopted by most Kimberley Indigenous ranger groups to plan, implement and review Ranger work. More than a decade ago, as a part of developing their Healthy Country Plan, Bardi Jawi Elders chose traditional oola places as an important part of Country to look after (one ‘target’). Elders also identified ‘attributes’ of traditional oola places (the main things used to identify health of a ‘target’) and related indicators (things that can be measured to give information about attribute viability or health). Using a range of methods and supported by collaborators, Bardi Jawi Rangers and Elders re-visited and validated the attributes and indicators, chose 3 traditional oola places to monitor, identified how the attributes relate to each oola place, trialled techniques for measuring indicators and, finally, commenced monitoring.

Attributes reflect how Bardi Jawi belonging, presence and active traditional use are a part of wetland health and include:

  • knowledge of sites and stories (especially of young people)
  • community members respectfully use and benefit
  • surrounding plants (related to historical condition and how places support use)
  • water quality (for drinking or swimming)
  • amount of water (related to historical condition and how places support use).

Drawing on work conducted with Māori people, the project also highlighted the importance of Indigenous peoples’ memory and historical knowledge in understanding wetland function and health. Rangers interviewed Traditional Owners and knowledgeable Elders to find out how traditional oola places looked and functioned in the past, using these memories to reflect on the current condition of attributes and to inform how they would like attributes to be (desired condition). Thinking about attribute change and condition also helped to decide on, or confirm, the indicators to measure to give information about attribute change over time. These indicators form the basis of the monitoring program, with indicator information recorded using a digital form (Fulcrum) by rangers during twice-yearly visits to the traditional oola places.

A key aspect of the project was trialling ways of communicating about the monitoring, including how the monitoring has been set up and what the monitoring is telling Bardi Jawi people about attribute health. One Bardi Jawi Ranger (Trevor Sampi) created artistic representations of the historical state of one traditional oola place and of the 5 attributes monitored across sites. Using the artwork and photos, project staff developed a visual guide to express monitoring methods and findings, as a tool to support ongoing monitoring by the rangers and inform management actions, and to communicate with the broader Bardi Jawi community (see below).

Management recommendations have arisen from the monitoring, with priorities including education about safe use of traditional oola places for drinking and swimming, teaching young people about the history of places and family connections, and, at 2 places, ideas to remove plants that are out-of-place and improve water quality.

The project:

  • operationalised Bardi Jawi attributes and indicators of traditional oola place health within a monitoring program that informs management activities
  • developed a visual guide to be used by the Bardi Jawi Rangers when conducting monitoring and to share with the broader Bardi Jawi community
  • achieved several strategies within the Bardi Jawi Indigenous Protected Area Management Plan (Healthy Country Plan)
  • contributed to processes that elevate Indigenous knowledge in planning and implementing wetland monitoring and informing wetland management.

This project was funded by a University of Western Australia Research Collaboration Award, Lotterywest and the Bardi Jawi Rangers, with additional support from the Australian Government under the National Environmental Science Program’s Resilient Landscapes Hub. The Bardi Jawi Rangers are supported and managed by the Kimberley Land Council.

Description Type

Other

Description Type:

Other

Any other descriptive information, e.g. a note or similar.
Language
English

Contributors

Contributor
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7470-4997
Leader
Yes
Contact
Yes
Positions
Position
Principal or Chief Investigator
Position:
Principal or Chief Investigator
Principal investigator refers to the person(s) in charge of a research project
Start Date
01-Jul-2021
End Date
31-Dec-2026
Roles
No Entries
Contributor
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0287-9720
Leader
No
Contact
No
Positions
Position
Co-investigator or Collaborator
Position:
Co-investigator or Collaborator
A Co-Investigator is a senior or key investigator involved in a research project who does not have the overall responsibility and authority of the Principal Investigator
Start Date
01-Jul-2021
End Date
---
Roles
No Entries
Contributor
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6026-8912
Leader
No
Contact
No
Positions
Position
Co-investigator or Collaborator
Position:
Co-investigator or Collaborator
A Co-Investigator is a senior or key investigator involved in a research project who does not have the overall responsibility and authority of the Principal Investigator
Start Date
01-Jul-2021
End Date
---
Roles
No Entries
Contributor
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0691-1625
Leader
No
Contact
No
Positions
Position
Principal or Chief Investigator
Position:
Principal or Chief Investigator
Principal investigator refers to the person(s) in charge of a research project
Start Date
01-Jul-2021
End Date
---
Roles
No Entries
Contributor
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3585-444X
Leader
No
Contact
No
Positions
Position
Co-investigator or Collaborator
Position:
Co-investigator or Collaborator
A Co-Investigator is a senior or key investigator involved in a research project who does not have the overall responsibility and authority of the Principal Investigator
Start Date
01-Jul-2021
End Date
---
Roles
No Entries
Contributor
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4383-4999
Leader
No
Contact
No
Positions
Position
Co-investigator or Collaborator
Position:
Co-investigator or Collaborator
A Co-Investigator is a senior or key investigator involved in a research project who does not have the overall responsibility and authority of the Principal Investigator
Start Date
01-Jul-2021
End Date
---
Roles
No Entries
Contributor
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7558-9022
Leader
No
Contact
No
Positions
Position
Co-investigator or Collaborator
Position:
Co-investigator or Collaborator
A Co-Investigator is a senior or key investigator involved in a research project who does not have the overall responsibility and authority of the Principal Investigator
Start Date
01-Jul-2021
End Date
---
Roles
No Entries
Contributor
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3650-3374
Leader
No
Contact
No
Positions
Position
Co-investigator or Collaborator
Position:
Co-investigator or Collaborator
A Co-Investigator is a senior or key investigator involved in a research project who does not have the overall responsibility and authority of the Principal Investigator
Start Date
01-Jul-2021
End Date
---
Roles
No Entries
Contributor
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1098-9428
Leader
No
Contact
No
Positions
Position
Co-investigator or Collaborator
Position:
Co-investigator or Collaborator
A Co-Investigator is a senior or key investigator involved in a research project who does not have the overall responsibility and authority of the Principal Investigator
Start Date
01-Jul-2021
End Date
---
Roles
No Entries
Contributor
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7995-0230
Leader
No
Contact
No
Positions
Position
Co-investigator or Collaborator
Position:
Co-investigator or Collaborator
A Co-Investigator is a senior or key investigator involved in a research project who does not have the overall responsibility and authority of the Principal Investigator
Start Date
01-Jul-2021
End Date
---
Roles
No Entries
Contributor
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4294-6008
Leader
No
Contact
No
Positions
Position
Co-investigator or Collaborator
Position:
Co-investigator or Collaborator
A Co-Investigator is a senior or key investigator involved in a research project who does not have the overall responsibility and authority of the Principal Investigator
Start Date
01-Jul-2021
End Date
---
Roles
No Entries
Contributor
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6525-953X
Leader
No
Contact
No
Positions
Position
Co-investigator or Collaborator
Position:
Co-investigator or Collaborator
A Co-Investigator is a senior or key investigator involved in a research project who does not have the overall responsibility and authority of the Principal Investigator
Start Date
01-Jul-2021
End Date
---
Roles
No Entries
Contributor
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1192-5909
Leader
No
Contact
No
Positions
Position
Co-investigator or Collaborator
Position:
Co-investigator or Collaborator
A Co-Investigator is a senior or key investigator involved in a research project who does not have the overall responsibility and authority of the Principal Investigator
Start Date
01-Jul-2021
End Date
---
Roles
No Entries
Contributor
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3490-6148
Leader
No
Contact
No
Positions
Position
Co-investigator or Collaborator
Position:
Co-investigator or Collaborator
A Co-Investigator is a senior or key investigator involved in a research project who does not have the overall responsibility and authority of the Principal Investigator
Start Date
01-Jul-2021
End Date
---
Roles
No Entries
Contributor
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3063-7785
Leader
No
Contact
No
Positions
Position
Co-investigator or Collaborator
Position:
Co-investigator or Collaborator
A Co-Investigator is a senior or key investigator involved in a research project who does not have the overall responsibility and authority of the Principal Investigator
Start Date
01-Jul-2021
End Date
---
Roles
No Entries

Organisations

Organisation ID
https://ror.org/047272k79
Roles
Role
Lead Research Organisation
Role:
Lead Research Organisation
The research organistion administratively responsible for the project; administering organisation
Start Date
2021-07-01
End Date
2026-12-31

RelatedObjects

No Entries

Alternate Identifier

No Entries

Related RAiDs

Title
Resilient Landscapes Hub (10.71821/ffc970c8)
Relation
IsPartOf
Relation:
IsPartOf
Relates a subproject back to its parent project

Access

Type
Open Access
Type:
Open Access
Open access refers to a resource that is immediately and permanently online, and free for all on the Web, without financial and technical barriers.The resource is either stored in the repository or referenced to an external journal or trustworthy archive.
Language
Text
Embargo Expiry

Subjects

Subject
Conservation and biodiversity (410401)
Keywords
Text
threatening processes
Language
eng
Text
threat mitigation
Language
eng
Text
resilience
Language
eng
Subject
Fire ecology (410205)
Keywords
Text
fire
Language
eng
Text
bushfire
Language
eng
Subject
Wildlife and habitat management (410407)
Keywords
Text
feral animals
Language
eng
Text
invasive species
Language
eng
Subject
Terrestrial ecology (310308)
Keywords
Text
weed
Language
eng
Subject
Ecohydrology (370702)
Keywords
Text
flood
Language
eng
Text
drought
Language
eng
Text
wetland
Language
eng

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