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Michael Douglas, Brendan Edgar, Jim Donaldson

Michael Douglas, Brendan Edgar, Jim Donaldson. Outline. Background, problem, approach Major findings and implications LWA’s contribution. Mimosa. >60% of Australia’s water resources. Heffernan touted the Ord as the next food bowl. Ord stage 2 sldie.

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Michael Douglas, Brendan Edgar, Jim Donaldson

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  1. Michael Douglas, Brendan Edgar, Jim Donaldson

  2. Outline • Background, problem, approach • Major findings and implications • LWA’s contribution

  3. Mimosa

  4. >60% of Australia’s water resources

  5. Heffernan touted the Ord as the next food bowl

  6. Ord stage 2 sldie

  7. Research to underpin sustainable management • Likely to be more development in northern Australia • Need to avoid the mistakes made in the south • Lack of basic knowledge of the full implications of options • => Clear need for research

  8. TRaCK’s Aim To provide science and knowledge that governments, communities and industries need for the sustainable management of Australia’s tropical rivers and estuaries 

  9. TRaCK Research Consortium • Over 80 researchers from 18 organisations • CDU, GU, UWA, UQ • JCU, ANU, Uni. Canberra • North Australian Indigenous Land & Sea Management Alliance (NAILSMA) • CSIRO, eriss, AIMS, GeoScience Australia • NT, WA, Qld Governments

  10. TRaCK Program 27 Research projects, 2006-10 • Why do people value tropical rivers? • How do tropical rivers differ across the region? • How do tropical rivers work (physical and biological processes)? • What are the economic opportunities for Indigenous people? • How can we make good decisions about managing tropical rivers? • How can we ensure uptake of this research?

  11. Where is TRaCK working? Darwin Region Daly Mitchell Fitzroy Flinders

  12. Outline • Background, problem, approach • Major findings and implications • LWA’s contribution

  13. Why do people value tropical rivers? • National and Catchment scale: • For the Indigenous people, environment and recreational use • Moderate expansion of irrigated agriculture. • Local community scale: • Harvesting and consuming aquatic resources can make a substantial contribution to Indigenous household economies.

  14. Daly seasonal calendar

  15. How do tropical rivers differ across the region?

  16. Socio-economic profiling TRaCK Project 3.1: Stoeckl, Larson, Alexandritis, Stanley, Carson, Taylor • Demographic Characteristics • Economic Parameters • Individual Wellbeing • Infrastructure and Services • Institutional Arrangements • Environment and Culture

  17. Ecohydrological regionalisation Stable summer baseflow (rainfall) Predictable summer highly intermittent Extreme harsh summer intermittent Stable summer baseflow (groundwater)

  18. Hyrtl’s Catfish Biodiversity surveys

  19. High conservation value aquatic ecosystems (HCVAE) using river biodiversity data Fish Dave Wilson Neil Armstrong Turtle Dave Wilson

  20. How can we make good decisions? • Trial of collaborative approaches in NT water allocation planning process

  21. Outcomes of the TRaCK program • Improved knowledge • New tools and approaches • High level end-user engagement

  22. Outcomes of the TRaCK program • Improved knowledge • New tools and approaches • High level end-user engagement • Increased capacity • Researchers: • 30 new research staff, 15 postgraduates • Tropical regions, Cross-cultural environments • End users: • Water managers

  23. Capacity building with Indigenous catchment groups • Supported development of Indigenous catchment groups • Training: Governance, Research skills, Presentation skills

  24. Outcomes of the TRaCK program • Improved knowledge • New tools and approaches • High level of end-user engagement • Increased capacity • Indigenous partnerships

  25. Outcomes of the TRaCK program • Improved knowledge • New tools and approaches • Increased capacity • High level engagement • Indigenous partnerships • Improved management

  26. How will this research make a difference? • Informing policy debate • Wild Rivers Qld, Living Rivers NT, Northern development • Assessment and planning: Regional • Northern Taskforce (ONA, NWC) • North Australian Water Futures Assessment (DEWHA, NWC) • Kimberley & Cape York Heritage Assessments (DEWHA) • Assessment and planning: Catchment/aquifer • Environmental flow assessments • Water allocation planning processes (NT, WA and Qld Departments) • Monitoring • River & Wetland Health (DEWHA & NWC, NT, WA, Qld Govt, NRM Groups, Kowanyama Land and Natural Resource Management Office) • Working on Country Ranger Program (DEWHA) • Opportunities for Indigenous enterprises • Water markets and water rights

  27. Where to next for TRaCK? • Originally planned as a 10 year program • Support for a continuation beyond 2010 • TRaCK consortium UJV • Co-ordinate funds from a range of sources • North Australian Biodiversity Hub • Expands the scope of TRaCK – Catchment to Coast • Biodiversity patterns • Threats to biodiversity and ecosystem resilience • Planning for conservation and management • Biodiversity values and Indigenous livelihoods • Ecosystem health assessment • Knowledge management and adoption

  28. Outline • Background, problem, approach • Major findings and implications • LWA’s contribution

  29. TRACK History: 2004 • 2004 • LWA Tropical Rivers Forum, Darwin • LWA Ecosystem Processes Project (CDU, GU, UWA) $30k • Develop conceptual models of ecosystem processes • Scope a larger program of research • Identify opportunities for integrated research • 2005 • Develop TRaCK Prospectus with LWA • Submit CERF application with LWA as host organisation • 2006 • NAILSMA join consortium • CERF funding • NWC funding • Qld Smart state

  30. LWA Contribution • Big picture vision for R&D • Scoping studies • Seeding funds for developing ideas

  31. Daly River Fish and Flows Project

  32. Bayesian Belief Network Model

  33. LWA Contribution • Big picture vision for R&D • Scoping studies • Seeding funds for developing ideas • Multidisciplinary, cross-program

  34. TRaCK end-users/funders • >$34m program • ~$ 23 m cash • Dept. Environment, Water, Heritage & the Arts • National Water Commission • Queensland Government • Land and Water Australia • Fisheries R&D Corporation • > $11m in-kind • Qld, NT, WA Governments • Regional NRM and Catchment groups • Indigenous organisations (Land councils, communities) • Industry e.g. Fisheries • Environment NGO’s

  35. LWA Contribution • Big picture vision for R&D • Scoping studies • Seeding funds for developing ideas • Multidisciplinary, cross-program • Brokering funding partnerships

  36. TRaCK’s Governance structure Land and Water Australia Board Project Co-ordinators

  37. LWA Contribution • Big picture vision for R&D • Scoping studies • Seeding funds for developing ideas • Multidisciplinary, cross-program • Brokering funding partnerships • Reputation, governance, management

  38. How can we ensure uptake of this research? • Knowledge and Adoption Theme • Staff, strategy and implementation plans • Communication products/activities • Active engagement of end users • Clear pathways for adoption • e.g. Planning processes, monitoring programs

  39. LWA Contribution • Big picture vision for R&D • Scoping studies • Seeding funds for developing ideas • Multidisciplinary, cross-program • Brokering funding partnerships • Reputation, governance, management • Knowledge & Adoption

  40. LWA Contribution • Big picture vision for R&D • Scoping studies • Seeding funds for developing ideas • Multidisciplinary, cross-program • Brokering funding partnerships • Reputation, governance, management • Knowledge & Adoption • Commitment to the North • Enduring influence – Kate, Brendan, John, Andrew, Me

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