Community of Practice for Environmental Water Managers

A message to all members of Community of Practice for Environmental Water Managers

Response of wetlands to rewetting following extensive drought: Conference and workshop

22 and 23 November 2011, Sydney Masonic Centre, 66 Goulburn St, Sydney

Expressions of interest – Speed Session Slots.

This conference and workshop aims to address both new research findings AND their current and potential applications. It will present field observations and research findings from scientists and mangers following recent major wetting episodes to identify opportunities for better management of discretionary environmental water. It will look particularly the impact of drought, recovery and response observations and water and land management lessons learnt.

Expressions of interest are invited to fill speed session slots. Please submit a brief (100 word) expression of interest for a 5 min presentation based on research or management case-studies to rivers.wetlands@environment.nsw.gov.au  by 5th October 2011.

For further details see: Flyer

Presented by:

  • The Office of Environment and Heritage, NSW
  • Environmental Water Management Network of the Australian Water Association.

Supported by:

  • National Climate Change Adaptation Research Facility (NCCARF) and
  • National Water Commission

Visit Community of Practice for Environmental Water Managers at: http://www.cop4ewm.com.au/?xg_source=msg_mes_network

Caring for our critical inland aquatic habitats – upcoming workshops with the Inland Rivers Network

The Inland Rivers Network will be hosting several workshops in NSW over the coming months as part of their project funded through the Federal Caring for Our Country program.  The workshops will focus on the importance of maintaining healthy, functioning and resilient freshwater ecosystems and the changes that are needed in water management to secure these precious inland river and wetland systems into the future. They will provide great opportunities for community members to learn from a range of presenters, discuss related local issues and get an update on what is happening in the Murray-Darling Basin.

BROKEN HILL
Date: Wednesday 28th September, 10am-3pm
Venue: Broken Hill Musicians Club, 276 Crystal Street, Broken Hill.
RSVP: by Wednesday 21st September

DUBBO
Date: Friday 11th November, 10am-3pm
Venue: Western Plains Cultural Centre, 76 Wingewarra Street, Dubbo.
RSVP: by Thursday 3rd November

TAMWORTH – early 2012, details to come – see IRN website.
WAGGA WAGGA – early 2012, details to come – see IRN website.
To RSVP register your interest or to find out more about these events contact Emma Hollows via coordinator@irnnsw.org.au or (02) 8580 6609.

Wetland Care Photography Competition – Get your entries in

WetlandCare Australia is running their 5th annual National Art and Photography Competition to celebrate World Wetlands Day. The aim of the competition is to engage and build the capacity of local communities to protect, promote and restore our precious wetlands. This year sees the introduction of Open and Youth categories for Indigenous artists to complement the established categories in Art and Photography that are open to all Australian residents. The competition will follow the same theme as World Wetlands Day 2012 of Wetlands, Tourism and Recreation which, as Liz Hajenko from Wetland Care says:

“covers the many different ways we all engage with wetlands and waterways: everything from fishing, sharing time in nature with family and friends, bird watching, through to the benefits and challenges of tourism.”

Competition entry forms and further information can be obtained from WetlandCare Australia’s website. The closing date for competition entries is December 2, 2011.  I attended the awards event this year and was impressed by the quality and beauty of the images, this photo is one I took at Millstream National Park in Western Australia, an absolutely gorgeous wetland right in the middle of harsh, arid country.  I look forward to seeing your photos!

Siwan

In Search of the Trout Cod

Siwan and I are very fortunate to be working with the Native Fish Strategy at the Murray Darling Basin Authority on a project involving Will Trueman (researcher and author) and Richard Snashall (film maker).

Will has undertaken an incredible piece of research, over many many years, into the status of native fish in the lower Murray Darling. Will has successfully combined the science, the historical records (newspapers, books and photographs) and anecdotes (oral histories) from sometimes very elderly residents of the region, to show just how prevalent the Trout Cod, Murray Cod, Macquarie Perch and many other native fish were in the 1860s up to the present day.

Will has done an exceptional job of combining science and story to create an accurate record of the status of native fish in the basin over the last 150+ years. He has also drawn on the writings of Mary Gilmore which are absolutely fascinating (more on this in later blogs) and now I find I am also reading all these wonderful accounts of early Australia. Using this variety of information he has created a captivating history of the loss of native fish from the region and what may have caused some of these losses.

The products of this project will include the full publication which will be submitted to the legal deposit libraries across Australia as a research record; a series of catchment by catchment publications, a web site with links to all the information; and several videos of Will sharing the stories and science that make up this amazing project. I was particularly impressed to hear that Will used Trove at the National Library of Australia to access the old newspaper records.  He told us that this research made up 30% of his primary source material and he could not have undertaken the level of research without having access to Trove.

I am particularly taken with this newspaper article about the size and aggression of the Trout Cod which Will found in the Trove database.

Adelaide Register, 20 May 1892

Murray Fish and their Habits (From our own correspondent) Blanchetown, May 15.

The Murray cod may be caught from one – quarter of an inch in length to over 100 lb. in weight. / A young German, an assistant at a wool washing establishment about five miles from here, was in a habit of bathing off the stage, and one day while having his usual dip sat on the stage with his feet swaying to and fro in the water, when a cod seized his foot, at the same time nearly forcing him off the stage into the water, the German having his foot severely scarred by the teeth of the cod. Some time elapsed before he recovered. At Weston’s Flat, a short distance above Morgan, the residents were in the habit of swimming their stock across the river for feed, and while swimming one of the horses it turned on one side, and with difficulty the boatman towed it to the shore, and with aid of blocks and tackle hauled him onto dry land, when, to their surprise, a huge cod had the horse’s foot in his mouth. The cod was captured, and weighed over 90 lb. Without doubt in some of the numerous cases of drowning, where good swimmers have disappeared, they have had a tussle with one of these “monsters of the deep.” 

This is just one sample of the newspaper articles collected by Will in his research.  The anecdotes collected from the fishermen are even more fascinating, but you will have to wait for the publication (expected by the end of 2011) for more.

Nerida

 

 

 

 

Reading the Landscape Biodiversity Conference, Dubbo 11-13 October

Central West CatchmeReading the Landscape Biodiversity Conference Logont Management Authority and the Biodiversity Conservation Science Section of the Department of Climate Change, Conservation and Water  is hosting what looks to be a great conference focusing on better understanding our natural systems – the plants, animals and ecosystems that we need for healthy and resilient  landscapes.  The Reading the Landscape Biodiversity Conference gives you an opportunity to better understand how to manage and improve your Catchment’s resilience, by sharing knowledge on relevant ecological research and landholder experience, as well as profiling success stories.

Land managers, agency staff, researchers and the wider community are invited to Dubbo’s Taronga Western Plains Zoo from 11 to 13 October 2011 to:

  • better understand what ‘biodiversity’ means and why it is important to sustainability
  • talk to researchers, experts and practitioners who are managing our local fauna and flora
  • learn about the science, information and resources that can support on-ground work in landscape management
  • see best practice for conserving and enhancing our threatened native wildlife
  • network and meet other people who are committed to making a difference.

Keynote speakers

Angus Emmott. Bridging the divide – creating policy that has relevance in the real world.

Rod Fensham. Through the lens of the explorers – Interpreting landscape change with the historical record.

John Shipp, Mick Kelly & Mal Ridges. Adding a little magic – Aboriginal NRM investment that looks to the future.

For more information and to register follow this link.

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