Download: Fast, Fun, Awesome
study in australia
student information in australia
Australian University graduate information
professional networking for australian university students
employment links for australian university students
University quizzes for australian students

Land use and conservation agreements studied

James Cook University researchers have produced a study into the ecological consequences and social inequities of conservation agreements offered by state governments.

Dr Vanessa Adams, an ecological economist and a Research Fellow at Charles Darwin University and an Adjunct at the ARC of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies, at JCU conducted the work while at JCU.

Dr Adams said more than 4,000 Australian landholders had entered into conservation agreements to protect biodiversity on their properties.

These agreements bind future landholders to protect the land’s biodiversity, which ensures the long-term survival of plant and animal communities.

Dr Adams said natural resource and mining policies in the respective states, however, did not exempt these private protected areas from mining activities.

“In all states of Australia, the government can still issue exploration and extraction permits for mining activities in these private protected areas,” she said.

“This situation creates an imbalance in the commitment to conservation, whereby landholders incur the costs, but the government derives the benefits.”

Dr Adams worked with Dr Katie Moon, who was at the time a JCU Earth & Environmental Sciences student and PhD candidate.

Dr Moon is now a Post Doctoral Research Fellow at the ANZSOG Institute for Governance/Institute of Applied Ecology within the University of Canberra.

Their study outlines the ecological consequences and social inequities of conservation agreements offered by state governments.

“Landholders must comply with the conditions of the conservation agreement, which can include limiting grazing activities, excluding domestic animals such as dogs, or replanting trees that have been removed,” she said.

“Such commitments come at a cost to landholders, both in terms of time and money.”

They cite Bimblebox Nature Refuge as an example of where a private landholder’s investment in conservation is being threatened by mining activities.

“Bimblebox is an 8,000 ha private protected area gazetted in 2003. Waratah Coal’s proposed Galilee Coal Project would place a “mega” mine on the nature refuge severely impacting the natural values the refuge was set up to protect.

“The proposed Galilee Coal Project is one of several proposed mega coal mines in the Galilee basin including the Alpha Coal project which recently received state level approval.”

In their journal article they argued that the conflict between economic and conservation policies must be dealt with in a more transparent manner.

“Mining within private protected areas, such as Queensland’s Nature Refuges, creates social consequences that could erode the public’s willingness to participate in such ’programs in the future,” Dr Adams said.

“Landholders who wish to conserve a part of their property through such agreements, basically have no guarantee that the area will be protected from mining interests”, she said.

The researchers offered a solution to overcome these inequities.

“We believe there are ways forward for dealing with competing values before agreements are put in place,” Dr Adams said.

“Before an agreement is signed, any existing interests in the property should be resolved, including mineral exploration or extraction permits,” she said.

Such an approach is used in the establishment of national parks and can increase the security of the conservation area.

“To ensure that landholders’ investment in their private protected areas is not lost, it is imperative that the process be reformed to address these potential conflicts at the outset.”

Contact for interviews: Dr Vanessa Adams 08 8946 7449 (W) 0406 592 198 (M) vanessa.adams@cdu.edu.au

Leave a reply

Feature Research
Queensland fraud is a billion dollar business

Queensland businesses could be losing over $12 billion per annum as a result of company fraud according to a recent study [more]

Inside the mind of a burglar

Burglars are opportunistic, generally choose their targets at random and know all the tricks householders try to use as deterrents, [more]

Flight experiment goes boldly forth to advance new technology

A hypersonic flight experiment at eight times the speed of sound, led by a University of Queensland PhD student, has [more]

Pre-drinking alcohol before hitting the nightclubs likely to lead to violence

The increasingly common practice of drinking at home before hitting the nightclubs is the major predictor of people experiencing harm [more]

Research reveals women are more interested in a man’s earning capacity than the size of his wallet

Despite ABBA’s insistence that women long for “money, money, money”, research has found that The Beatles were on the [more]

Challenges still face women seeking seniority in business

Research conducted by the UTS Centre for Corporate Governance underpinning the 2012 Australian Census of Women in Leadership reveals a decade [more]

Swiss Army Knife teeth secret to seal’s success

Biologists have shown how an advanced set of teeth give Antarctic leopard seals the biological tools to feast on prey [more]

Beautiful physics: Tying knots in light

New research published today seeks to push the discovery that light can be tied in knots to the next level. [more]

Why the world’s biggest fish needs to swim near the surface

Whale sharks, the world’s biggest fish, can dive to chilly waters hundreds of metres deep but they need to [more]

Menopause not to blame for weight gain

Menopause doesn’t cause women to gain weight, but affects where weight gain occurs, according to the latest research. In [more]

The Big Issue

There is no content to display. Please enter a valid embed URL in the visual editor.

Generation One
CP League
SUBSCRIBE
FACEBOOK