Project start date: 01/09/2023
Project end date: 30/06/2026
NESP funding: $760,021 (GST-exclusive)
Climate change is escalating the risks to threatened species and ecosystems across Australia. Warming temperatures and changing rainfall patterns pose threats in themselves and may also exacerbate the risks from other threats such as feral animals, weeds and development pressures. In coastal regions, sea-level rise is changing coastal processes and damaging habitat.
Under such complex scenarios, stakeholders and decision-makers need data, information and tools to ensure that adaptation strategies and actions are appropriate and effective. To be successful, strategies and actions must be accepted by the community and be culturally appropriate, and be informed by local knowledge, including Traditional Knowledge.
Jagun River Custodians and Heal the Rivers team members at Balun / Richmond River. Photo: Jagun Alliance.
This project will develop climate change adaptation plans for the Northern Rivers region of New South Wales and the Wet Tropics of Queensland. Both regions are home to many threatened species and ecological communities and contain a diverse range of land uses and protected areas, including significant wetlands, national parks, World Heritage Areas, Indigenous Protected Areas and Indigenous Land Use Agreements. They are also places of rapid change: in a 3-year period in the Northern Rivers region, unprecedented drought was followed by bushfires and floods in rapid succession.
In each region, researchers will work with local community groups, Indigenous organisations, NRM groups and government agencies to design adaptation plans that can be embedded in planning and conservation initiatives. The plans will identify key climate risks for selected species and ecosystems and develop feasible strategies and options to manage these risks.
Adapting to the conservation challenges posed by climate change is a problem facing all landscapes and communities throughout Australia. The Northern Rivers and Wet Tropics regions provide case studies where approaches and tools can be developed that are transferable to other regions.
Flood at Coopers Creek, NSW. Photo: Oliver Costello.
Key research areas
To assist local communities to develop adaptation plans for focal threatened species and ecosystems, this project will:
Pathway to impact
The research will assist communities to build the climate resilience of threatened species and ecosystems within their regions by:
Project leader
The project is being led by Professor Brendan Mackey from Griffith University and Oliver Costello from the Jagun Alliance Aboriginal Corporation and Associate Professor Diane Jarvis from James Cook University.
Contact
For further information, contact b.mackey@griffith.edu.au, oli@jagunalliance.org.au, diane.jarvis1@jcu.edu.au or nesplandscapes@uwa.edu.au.
Research users
People