Project 3.2
Planning for catchment resilience and threatened species recovery from extreme events in Queensland’s Moonaboola (Mary River)
Eastern node leader
Professor, Australian Rivers Institute, Griffith University
Deputy Dean (Research), Griffith Sciences
See Professor Kennard’s full research profile here.
Research outputs linked to policy change and decision-making
Current academic employment and positions
Highest qualification
Major prizes, medals and honours
Roles on government or regional organisation committees
Links with non-government groups or networks
Completed project
Planning for catchment resilience and threatened species recovery from extreme events in Queensland’s Moonaboola (Mary River)
Guiding the strategic management of freshwater fish
National overview of monitoring frameworks and tools for Ramsar sites
Assessing risks to the environment from water-resource development in northern Australia, using north Queensland as a case study
Using integrated data analysis to assess regional transferability
Restoring and recovering landscape resilience
Strengthening resilience to threatening processes and extreme events
Cross-cutting initiative research
Applying knowledge of river flow–ecology links
Prioritising threatened species in northern Australia
Environmental-economic accounting for the Mitchell River
Environmental water needs for the Mitchell River
Multi-objective planning in northern Australia
Improved detection of non-native freshwater fish species in northern Australia
Assessing fish species composition in the southern Gulf of Carpentaria, and links with cultural knowledge