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Threatened Species Recovery Hub
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 8 พ.ย. 2016
The National Environmental Science Programme Threatened Species Recovery Hub, brings together Australia's leading ecologists and environmental managers to carry out research to improve the management of Australia's threatened plants and animals.
Success stories in conservation
We need to promote and celebrate past successes in threatened species recovery, in order to demonstrate that it can be achieved and to strengthen on-ground support for the conservation of threatened species.
This project has collated numerous examples of success in threatened species conservation from around Australia and brought them together in Recovering Australian Threatened Species: A Book of Hope. Hear more from Prof Stephen Garnett from Charles Darwin University.
This project has collated numerous examples of success in threatened species conservation from around Australia and brought them together in Recovering Australian Threatened Species: A Book of Hope. Hear more from Prof Stephen Garnett from Charles Darwin University.
มุมมอง: 479
วีดีโอ
Managing feral cats to benefit the night parrot
มุมมอง 5703 ปีที่แล้ว
Predation by the introduced feral cat has been highlighted as a key potential threat to the Endangered night parrot. To make management actions in night parrot habitat effective, this project will examine the spatial ecology of cats using a combination of new technology that is now available to researchers. In addition to this, new information on how to detect night parrot is being shared with ...
Rabbit burrows helping cats colonise new frontier
มุมมอง 3483 ปีที่แล้ว
Across Australia’s arid zones feral cats are utilising micro-refuges, like rabbit burrows, to help them persist in areas that are otherwise unsuitable. Dr Natalie Briscoe from The University of Melbourne tells us about her research to explore and map the importance of micro-refuges for feral cats, which has important implications for cat management. This research was undertaken by the Threatene...
Research insights on bushfire recovery - 7. Road to Recovery
มุมมอง 203 ปีที่แล้ว
Discussion with John Woinarski, Libby Rumpff and Rachel Morgain, facilitated by Bush Heritage CEO Heather Campbell for Australian Land Conservation Alliance for the PLC2021 Online Summit
Research insights on bushfire recovery - 6. Community
มุมมอง 93 ปีที่แล้ว
Discussion with John Woinarski, Libby Rumpff and Rachel Morgain, facilitated by Bush Heritage CEO Heather Campbell for Australian Land Conservation Alliance for the PLC2021 Online Summit
Research insights on bushfire recovery - 5. Perspectives and Inclusion
มุมมอง 133 ปีที่แล้ว
Discussion with John Woinarski, Libby Rumpff and Rachel Morgain, facilitated by Bush Heritage CEO Heather Campbell for Australian Land Conservation Alliance for the PLC2021 Online Summit
Research insights on bushfire recovery - 4. Prepare and Coordinate
มุมมอง 103 ปีที่แล้ว
Discussion with John Woinarski, Libby Rumpff and Rachel Morgain, facilitated by Bush Heritage CEO Heather Campbell for Australian Land Conservation Alliance for the PLC2021 Online Summit
Research insights on bushfire recovery - 3. Fire and Water
มุมมอง 233 ปีที่แล้ว
Discussion with John Woinarski, Libby Rumpff and Rachel Morgain, facilitated by Bush Heritage CEO Heather Campbell for Australian Land Conservation Alliance for the PLC2021 Online Summit.
Research insights on bushfire recovery - 2. Black Summer
มุมมอง 113 ปีที่แล้ว
Discussion with John Woinarski, Libby Rumpff and Rachel Morgain, facilitated by Bush Heritage CEO Heather Campbell for Australian Land Conservation Alliance for the PLC2021 Online Summit
Research insights on bushfire recovery - 1. Introduction
มุมมอง 213 ปีที่แล้ว
Discussion with John Woinarski, Libby Rumpff and Rachel Morgain, facilitated by Bush Heritage CEO Heather Campbell for Australian Land Conservation Alliance for the PLC2021 Online Summit
Finding the silver-headed and the black-tailed dusky antechinus
มุมมอง 1.2K3 ปีที่แล้ว
Two endangered Antechinus species, the black-tailed dusky antechinus, and the silver-headed antechinus, survive only in tiny populations in some small areas of east coast mountain ranges. They ranked in the top 20 Australian mammals most likely to go extinct. This project uses detection dogs together with other search methods to systematically survey areas where these Endangered species have be...
Final findings: Fire severity and impacts on priority wildlife species
มุมมอง 1043 ปีที่แล้ว
John Woinarski, Payal Bal, Jess Marsh, Libby Rumpff, Chris Jolly and Renee Catullo present the final findings and recommendations on a number of NESP TSR Hub projects with a focus on “Fire severity and impacts on priority wildlife species” including that of invertebrates and vertebrates.
Final findings: Iconic species in schools
มุมมอง 743 ปีที่แล้ว
Natasha Ward and Sarah Bekessy present final findings and recommendations from the NESP TSR Hub’s “Iconic Species in Schools” project. More information available: www.nespthreatenedspecies.edu.au/projects/iconic-species-in-schools
Final findings Effective partnerships and research collaboration for conservation
มุมมอง 533 ปีที่แล้ว
Dr Rachel Morgain and Professor Stephen Garnett present the final findings and recommendations from two NESP TSR Hub projects focused on effective partnerships for threatened species recovery and how best to measure the uptake and outcomes from environmental research.
Reading the sand - Arid Zone Monitoring
มุมมอง 8193 ปีที่แล้ว
We still know relatively little about the distribution and abundance of many desert animal species, and if numbers are going up or down. However, over the past decade many Indigenous ranger groups, desert ecologists, NGOs and government agencies have combined traditional Indigenous tracking skills with a scientific approach to data collection to survey wildlife and their threats. Over 7000 sand...
Ensuring better offsets for threatened species and biodiversity
มุมมอง 2083 ปีที่แล้ว
Ensuring better offsets for threatened species and biodiversity
Feral cat distribution, abundance, management and impacts on threatened species
มุมมอง 4853 ปีที่แล้ว
Feral cat distribution, abundance, management and impacts on threatened species
Fire, predators and the endangered northern bettong
มุมมอง 4963 ปีที่แล้ว
Fire, predators and the endangered northern bettong
Results of cat baiting trials to help an endangered wallaby in Queensland
มุมมอง 2603 ปีที่แล้ว
Results of cat baiting trials to help an endangered wallaby in Queensland
Webinar: Coordinating to protect culture & biodiversity in the heat of wildfires
มุมมอง 1563 ปีที่แล้ว
Webinar: Coordinating to protect culture & biodiversity in the heat of wildfires
Findings presentation: Improving translocations in a changing climate
มุมมอง 763 ปีที่แล้ว
Findings presentation: Improving translocations in a changing climate
Webinar: Saving wildlife after bushfires: what is the evidence for effective action?
มุมมอง 2233 ปีที่แล้ว
Webinar: Saving wildlife after bushfires: what is the evidence for effective action?
Understanding and combatting myrtle rust
มุมมอง 2K3 ปีที่แล้ว
Understanding and combatting myrtle rust
Findings Presentation: Adaptive Management for threatened mammals in the Victorian Central Highlands
มุมมอง 423 ปีที่แล้ว
Findings Presentation: Adaptive Management for threatened mammals in the Victorian Central Highlands
Assessing biodiversity and cultural values for development proposals in northern Australia
มุมมอง 413 ปีที่แล้ว
Assessing biodiversity and cultural values for development proposals in northern Australia
Final findings: Better managing fires and their impacts for koala conservation
มุมมอง 453 ปีที่แล้ว
Final findings: Better managing fires and their impacts for koala conservation
Final findings focused on woodlands birds and species
มุมมอง 843 ปีที่แล้ว
Final findings focused on woodlands birds and species
Island Way, Desert Way - Kiwirrkurra and li-Anthawirriyarra Rangers share cat management knowledge
มุมมอง 6023 ปีที่แล้ว
Island Way, Desert Way - Kiwirrkurra and li-Anthawirriyarra Rangers share cat management knowledge
Promoting sustainable development in northern Australia
มุมมอง 1213 ปีที่แล้ว
Promoting sustainable development in northern Australia
❤ Easier than**"""" alone
Pretty plants, yes :3
Ive seen alot of angry type criminals who've been exposed to cats.
Love this thank you
Simply beautiful
Toxoplasma Gondii is protozoa, and protozoas don't lay eggs...please use proper scientific terms...
We see them where I am. I get worried about all the development threatening them. So many native animals driven to extinction or near extinction by human selfishness
How absolutely awful and shocking! I understood that habitat was getting worse for the frogs, but had no idea that it was that bad! What can we Australian’s do, there must be something? 🙏
great suggestions but easier said than done.
There is plenty out there not sure where your searching.
Thay should travel traditional way buy foot falcon these aren't traditional rangers
I have a photo somewhere of this bird on a mine site in the Pilbara region…
Yeah definitely not endangered I have about a billion on my property 😅
Miracle of the century
Many people don’t seem to care that their cat kills wildlife, in fact, many cat owners will swear THEIR cat never does. When will effectively laws, that are policed, be brought in to contain cats to their property?
Awesome!
As a cat lover, I can also respect the responsibility which has to come in choosing a small tiger to live in the home, and as such none of the 12 cats which have kept me as their warm safe place to be fed, have ever been permitted to keep their fecundity. Whether tom or she, the tame domestic cat lives longer and stays healthier without their gonads. This is a fact, for many reasons. Toms don't wander off and frequently get abscess from fights with other cats for territory (or sex) and she cats can have 2 or 3 litters in a year, which increase in the first at about 4 kittens (which is possible within 6 months of their own birth) and litters tend to increase in number with each queening, and can reach numbers of kittens like 19 (a known maximum). I hold people and their failure to contain and to desex their feline responsibilities as the cause, and IMO it is an unfortunate fact that it is socially unacceptable to desex or to cull them. Which would not solve the problem now that the ungelded horse, so to speak, has got out the gate and is now in the next state. PAPP, retailed with the trade name "Curiosity" to those licensed by varying state regulations and within certain standards to do so. 1080 in Victoria is not permitted for use on free range cats, and PAPP is presented as a little less inhumane than 1080, but nothing on Earth as sentient as a mosquito has a natural death wish, so culling is always at some point too cruel to accept upon yourself or a friend, and doubt captive kill and use of barbitturate "green sleep" has the capacity for the reduction in population of 20 million free range moggies by a half a dozen rangers. Incentive for desexing could be provided by government with fiscal support, and cats are fine kept inside a house or at least within the same property and fenced land, provided they have a place to climb, the attention of their human companions, and a few things to play with. A bored animal of any species will lose the plot or start to wish they were somewhere else, and cats naturally sleep at least 2/3 of a day, on and off, with this time increasing with their age. Kittens are at their most active stage, when a few months old, but still sleep 12 in 24. All cats can be desexed at 6 months to 1 year, and the sooner done the safer and more likely to be at home at home. It might have been a better choice too, NOT to kill off the Dingo, because as top predator it may have controlled both the fox and the cat.
where are they?
My backyard quenda chased the cat outa the cat biscuits lmao😂
Thank you so much to those who work so hard to preserve our native flora. Many people have little idea how vital this is.
this si BS. wild cats eat mostly reptiles and birds. it makes 0% sense to only measure mammal prays. clowns
Why do I feel like they'll also evolve to be flightless in a few generations
I love animals...they're delicious 😂. Just kidding guys
Humans are killing them for their comfort
th-cam.com/users/shortsdeiIIJhAHXA?si=Qw3XX1uwCdQstShS
Great job Sir
f.b.i. disease here in USA if the man traveled to down under or traveled at all labeled biotech weapon for female F.B.I. employees
Beautiful creatures
HI .denmark wa australia . am i aloud to set a fish trap . identerfie . and release. over a 48 hour period.... school project to see what is in our catchment.....good work by the way....
CRISPR/CAS9 induced gene drive in invasive species is the solution. We just need to apply it.
Give me back my rifles and let me loose out there and i will shoot feral pigs and cats till my shoulder dislocates. I have lived in the wilderness for many years and have seen the destruction these pests wreak. Twice a year as a teenager we went out and culled these pests, and the feral dogs, rabbits, hares, foxes, goats, ect. Such an opportunity to put idle youth to good use as well as getting a handle on these ferals. Once a fortnight i collect a sand bag full of cane toads drown them, chop off their legs and feed this to my local Crow family, though to be fair they are spoilt and still prefer cooked chicken, but tough titties they have to help too. lol...Keep up the good works.
Why did i find this from a link from a piece of cutout paper spread across my neighborhood dawg i was expecting some crazy gore stuff
A neighbor was probably concerned about a “community cat” program, for good reason.
What a hatred for cats. I've lived with cats all my life and nothing has ever happened to me. What viruses and parasites does a person transmit? Poor pets in Australia
This is an educational video on disease and their effect on human health. I have a roomate who's mental health, and health and skin overall went to sh*t after owning about 10 cats, and dealing with feeding dozens of strays. She sometimes let's the strays roam in the home. I honestly believe this as she's not the same person she was prior to owning cats. This is not a hate but facts. Just like humans can spread illnesses towards another such as the flu, herpes etc. Just because you haven't caught any doesn't mean others don't have it and can't spread it.
Look up "rat attraction to cats". It's a fungal infection that makes rats stop seeing cats as their predators. It can be transmitted to humans too, explaining the 'crazy cat lady/mister syndrome'...
Relax ana, cats are not your husband or can take the place of humans. Thisnis s ience. Not opinion.swallow
@@IndoPakCanvas Yes, you are right, they are not like people..they are better than people a hundred times. And science is not a dogma, but is constantly tested. 😁And anything can be called science.. If you support the killing of large numbers of animals (not just cats) in Australia, which is known as the country with the worst animal welfare laws, then I don't know what to say to you. Everything is an invasive species to them, except humans who are definitely the #1 invasive species. And humans are not native to Australia, why don't they go back to where they came from and colonize the continent..That would be the best thing for nature and the environment 😁😁🤣
Ah, if "nothing has ever happened" to you, then I guess it isn't a problem. Ignore the dozens of studies, all of the data obtained from scientific research across the globe. It hasn't happened to this random person so it isn't real.
A cat is a domestic animal and has no place in the wild, it is there because of man's carelessness. She hunts to survive. Why don't you just catch them and take them to shelters? Since they are domestic animals, they are put up for adoption. And solved problems. I don't understand Australia, instead of poisoning and killing them, they also destroy animals to survive, isn't that more humane?
BRAVO!!!! ENCORE!!!!
BRAVO!!!! ENCORE!!!!
And mice! Lol
Sort it out
To what extent do the cats (at least the larger ones) control the bunnies? And the rats and mice, for that matter?
i dont have a cat, i don have a dog, but i wish i had... a ✨ferret✨
Buffaloes and dingoes aren't bad. Both provide crucial ecological benefits. For example, buffalo reduce wildfires, disperse and germinate seeds, improve soil quality with their dung, provide dung for dung beetles and flies, and provide invertebrates for cattle egrets, pied herons, white-faced egrets, and willie wagtails.
And you thought Crash himself is a tailless fox.
Amazing.... 10 Species have gone extinct in Australia from Ferrell cats; Not one word about that in this documentary.
Can A Feral Cat 🐈 Mate With Wild Australian. Rabbits 🐇 ?
Of course not there different species
They need to be exterminated, period.
Yes
Thank you, great video
all the best
Great video!, it's upsetting that this is happening and the government still thinks it's ok to stock trout.
Thanks ❤️🐾 I'll check it out. I hope there's Megabats and Microbats 😳 🦇BatsRule! There's a reason why they do..
Dingoes play an important part of Australia’s ecosystems. Reducing feral animal populations.