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Registros recuperados: 191
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Using Private Rights to Manage Natural Resources: Is Stewardship Linked to Ownership? Ecology and Society
Gilmour, Patrick W; Department of Zoology, The University of Melbourne; gilmourp@unimelb.edu.au; Day, Robert W; Department of Zoology, The University of Melbourne; r.day@unimelb.edu.au; Dwyer, Peter D; Department of Resource Management and Geography, The University of Melbourne; pddwyer@unimelb.edu.au.
There is increasing interest in privatizing natural resource systems to promote sustainability and conservation goals. Though economic theory suggests owners of private property rights have an incentive to act as resource stewards, few studies have tested this empirically. This paper asks whether private rights-owners were more conservative with respect to their management opinions than nonrights-owners in five Australian abalone (Haliotis spp.) fisheries. Multiple regression analyses were used to link opinions to demographic, economic, and attitudinal variables. In contrast to standard economic assumptions, nonrights-owners suggested more conservative catch limits than did rights-owners, confirming qualitative observations of behavior in management...
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed Reports Palavras-chave: Australia; Comanagement; Fisheries; Individual transferable quota; Property rights; Stewardship; Sustainable behavior.
Ano: 2012
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Cross-cultural Conflicts in Fire Management in Northern Australia: Not so Black and White Ecology and Society
Andersen, Alan; Wildlife and Ecology, CSIRO Tropical Ecosystems Research Centre; Alan.Andersen@terc.csiro.au.
European ("scientific") and Aboriginal ("experiential") perspectives on fire management in northern Australia are often contrasted with each other. For Europeans, management is portrayed as a science-based, strategically directed and goal-oriented exercise aimed at achieving specific ecological outcomes. In contrast, landscape burning by Aboriginal people is more of an emergent property, diffusely arising from many uses of fire that serve social, cultural, and spiritual, as well as ecological, needs. Aboriginal knowledge is acquired through tradition and personal experience, rather than through the scientific paradigm of hypothesis testing. Here I argue that, in practice, science plays only a marginal role in European fire management in northern Australia....
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed Reports Palavras-chave: Aboriginal burning; Adaptive management; Australia; Cross-cultural conflict; Fire ecology; Land management; Management culture; Performance indicators; Science culture; Strategic goals; Traditional fire ecology and management..
Ano: 1999
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Evidence that a Highway Reduces Apparent Survival Rates of Squirrel Gliders Ecology and Society
McCall, Sarah C; Australian Research Centre for Urban Ecology; School of Botany, University of Melbourne;; McCarthy, Michael A; School of Botany, University of Melbourne; mamcca@unimelb.edu.au; van der Ree, Rodney; Australian Research Centre for Urban Ecology; School of Botany, University of Melbourne; rvdr@unimelb.edu.au; Harper, Michael J; Australian Research Centre for Urban Ecology; Department of Sustainability and Environment, Victoria;; Cesarini, Silvana; School of Biological Scienes, Monash University;; Soanes, Kylie; Australian Research Centre for Urban Ecology;.
Roads and traffic are prominent components of most landscapes throughout the world, and their negative effects on the natural environment can extend for hundreds or thousands of meters beyond the road. These effects include mortality of wildlife due to collisions with vehicles, pollution of soil and air, modification of wildlife behavior in response to noise, creation of barriers to wildlife movement, and establishment of dispersal conduits for some plant and animal species. In southeast Australia, much of the remaining habitat for the squirrel glider, Petaurus norfolcensis, is located in narrow strips of Eucalyptus woodland that is adjacent to roads and streams, as well as in small patches of woodland vegetation that is farther from roads. We evaluated...
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed Reports Palavras-chave: Australia; Emigration; Mortality; Population persistence; Road ecology; Squirrel glider; Survival.
Ano: 2010
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Elevated Levels of Herbivory in Urban Landscapes: Are Declines in Tree Health More Than an Edge Effect? Ecology and Society
Christie, Fiona J; University of Sydney; christie@bio.usyd.edu.au; Hochuli, Dieter F; University of Sydney; dieter@bio.usyd.edu.au.
Urbanization is one of the most extreme and rapidly growing anthropogenic pressures on the natural world. Urban development has led to substantial fragmentation of areas of natural habitat, resulting in significant impacts on biodiversity and disruptions to ecological processes. We investigated the levels of leaf damage caused by invertebrates in a dominant canopy species in urban remnants in a highly fragmented urban landscape in Sydney, Australia, by assessing the frequency and extent of chewing and surface damage of leaves in urban remnants compared to the edges and interiors of continuous areas of vegetation. Although no difference was detected in the frequency of leaves showing signs of damage at small, edge, and interior sites, small sites suffered...
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed Reports Palavras-chave: Urban landscapes; Herbivory; Invertebrates; Urbanization; Remnant vegetation; Fragmentation; Leaf damage; Australia.
Ano: 2005
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Separating Adaptive Maintenance (Resilience) and Transformative Capacity of Social-Ecological Systems Ecology and Society
Wilson, Samuel; Melbourne Sustainable Society Institute, The University of Melbourne, Australia; Present address: School of Psychology and Psychiatry, Monash University, Australia;; Pearson, Leonie J; Melbourne Sustainable Society Institute, The University of Melbourne, Australia; Land and Environment, The University of Melbourne, Australia; lpearson@unimelb.edu.au; Kashima, Yoshihisa; Melbourne Sustainable Society Institute, The University of Melbourne, Australia; Psychological Sciences, The University of Melbourne, Australia;; Lusher, Dean; Swinburne Institute of Social Research, Swinburne University of Technology, 3122 Australia;; Pearson, Craig; Melbourne Sustainable Society Institute, The University of Melbourne, Australia;.
Many rural communities are vulnerable social-ecological systems (SES) that must do more than become resilient to future environmental and social shocks: they must transform to achieve sustainability. We aimed first to conceptually explore the proposition that SES characteristics (identity, feedbacks, structure, and functions) necessary for transformation may be distinct from those necessary for adaptive maintenance or resilience, and second, to propose metrics that may be used to assess these two types of system changes. We did this by interrogating literature and by investigating two rural towns in Australia using a combination of quantitative methods and focus groups to interrogate community social networks, capitals (human, natural, built, and social)...
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed Reports Palavras-chave: Australia; Feedbacks; Functions; Identity; Structure.
Ano: 2013
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Collapse and Reorganization in Social-Ecological Systems: Questions, Some Ideas, and Policy Implications Ecology and Society
Abel, Nick; CSIRO; nick.abel@csiro.au; Cumming, David H. M.; University of Zimbabwe; dcumming@science.uz.ac.zw; Anderies, John M; Arizona State University; m.anderies@asu.edu.
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed Reports Palavras-chave: Key words: resilience collapse; Recovery; Social-ecological systems; Adaptive cycle; Natural capital; Social capital; Human capital; Zimbabwe; Australia.
Ano: 2006
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Household rainwater tanks: mediating changing relations with water? Ecology and Society
Farbotko, Carol; CSIRO; carol.farbotko@csiro.au; Walton, Andrea; CSIRO; Andrea.Walton@csiro.au; Mankad, Aditi; CSIRO; Aditi.Mankad@csiro.au; Gardner, John; CSIRO; John.Gardner@csiro.au.
Domestic rainwater tanks have become commonplace in Australia's urban landscape, and have become the physical embodiment of the changing relations between householders, water, and water authorities. The aim of our research was to understand these changing relations by examining how domestic rainwater tanks are inscribed with meanings and assumptions and thus mediate a relationship between households and government. In particular, we considered how domestic rainwater tanks are implicated in various understandings of entitlements to water collected or used in private domains. We examined how tanks can render visible the contestation over rights and obligations of state and citizen as to what is considered private and public water collection, management, and...
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed Reports Palavras-chave: Australia; Decentralized water collection; Domestic rainwater tanks; Household water; Private water use; Rainwater privatization; Rainwater tanks; Urban rainwater collection; Urban rainwater storage; Water rights.
Ano: 2014
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An interview methodology for exploring the values that community leaders assign to multiple-use landscapes. Ecology and Society
Hatton MacDonald, Darla; CSIRO Ecosystem Sciences; darla.hattonmacdonald@csiro.au; Bark, Rosalind; CSIRO Ecosystem Sciences; Rosalind.bark@csiro.au; MacRae, Andrea; University of Adelaide; andrea.snowden@gmail.com; Kalivas, Tina; Monash Sustainability Institute, Monash University ; tina.kalivas@monash.edu; Strathearn, Sarah; University of Adelaide; sarah.strathearn@deewr.gov.au.
We report on a grounded theory research methodology to elicit the values that underpin community leaders’ advice on regional natural resource management. In-depth, semi-structured in-person interviews of 56 community leaders permitted respondents to explore their values and to elucidate some trade-offs. Furthermore, analysis of the coded transcripts provides evidence of the anthropocentric nature of values, and the importance of people, communities, and physical infrastructure. As well, the relative silence by community NRM leaders on supporting and regulating ecosystem services may reveal a lack of understanding of these functions rather than a discord in values. The tested methodology provides one approach to understanding the values of...
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed Reports Palavras-chave: Australia; Community leaders; Ecosystem services; Grounded theory; Natural resource management; Values.
Ano: 2013
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Integrating Indigenous Ecological Knowledge and Science in Natural Resource Management: Perspectives from Australia Ecology and Society
Bohensky, Erin L.; CSIRO Ecosystem Sciences; erin.bohensky@csiro.au; Butler, James R. A.; CSIRO Ecosystem Sciences; james.butler@csiro.au; Davies, Jocelyn; CSIRO Ecosystem Sciences; Jocelyn.Davies@csiro.au.
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed article Palavras-chave: Australia; Indigenous knowledge; Knowledge integration; Natural resource management; Resilience.
Ano: 2013
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Applying Landscape Science to Natural Resource Management Ecology and Society
Robinson , Guy M; Centre for Regional Engagement, University of South Australia; Guy.Robinson@unisa.edu.au; Carson, Doris A; Centre for Regional Engagement, University of South Australia; doris.carson@unisa.edu.au.
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed article Palavras-chave: Australia; Landscape science; Modeling; Natural resource management (NRM); Stakeholder integration.
Ano: 2013
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The Natural Resource Management Implications of Rural Property Turnover Ecology and Society
Mendham, Emily; National Centre for Groundwater Research and Training; Institute for Land, Water and Society, Charles Sturt University ; emendham@csu.edu.au; Curtis, Allan; National Centre for Groundwater Research and Training; Institute for Land, Water and Society, Charles Sturt University ; acurtis@csu.edu.au; Millar, Joanne; Institute for Land, Water and Society, Charles Sturt University; School of Environmental Sciences, Charles Sturt University; jmillar@csu.edu.au.
One aspect of recent rural change is in-migration, which is challenging the traditional dominance of production values in some areas. We explored the natural resource management implications of property turnover in two Australian regions. Our mixed-methods approach combined analysis of property sales records and spatially referenced landholder survey data with data from key informant interviews. Close to 50% of rural properties are expected to change hands between 2006 and 2016, double the change in the previous decade. This change is linked to the transformation of these rural areas, including the influx of non-farming rural landholders seeking amenity values. Our research suggests that property turnover of this scale has important implications for...
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed Reports Palavras-chave: Amenity migration; Australia; Property turnover; Rural land use change.
Ano: 2012
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Seeing is questioning: prompting sustainability discourses through an evocative visual agenda Ecology and Society
Thomsen, Dana C; Sustainability Research Centre, University of the Sunshine Coast; dthomsen@usc.edu.au.
I explore the potential utility of visual imagery to engage viewers in connecting ways with dynamic social-ecological contexts. Constructing photographs in response to the mass stranding of birds (shearwaters) on the east coast of Australia in 2013, I demonstrate the potential of wildlife and landscape photography to represent the impacts of environmental change at personal, relational, spatial, and temporal scales simultaneously. In so doing, I suggest that the production and interpretation of photographs can lead to responses that: (1) foster attentive forms of vision in familiar contexts; (2) provoke reflexive self-examination and critiques of broader, complex systems; (3) develop emotional connections with those impacted by social-ecological change;...
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed Insight Palavras-chave: Art; Australia; Autoethnography; Environmental change; Interdisciplinary; Learning for sustainability; Photography; Social-ecological change; Visual communication.
Ano: 2015
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Toward Operationalizing Resilience Concepts in Australian Marine Sectors Coping with Climate Change Ecology and Society
Leith, Peat; Tasmanian Institute of Agriculture, University of Tasmania; Peat.Leith@utas.edu.au; Madin, Elizabeth M.; Department of Environmental Sciences, University of Technology Sydney; Dept. of Biological Sciences, Macquarie University ; dr.elizabeth.madin@gmail.com.
We seek to contribute to the scholarship on operationalizing resilience concepts via a working resilience indicator framework. Although it requires further refinement, this practical framework provides a useful baseline for generating awareness and understanding of the complexity and diversity of variables that impinge on resilience. It has potential value for the evaluation, benchmarking, monitoring, and reporting of marine system resilience. The necessity for such a framework is a consequence of the levels of complexity and uncertainty associated with climate change and other global change stressors in marine social-ecological systems, and the problems involved in assessing their resilience. There is a need for: (1) methodologies that bring together...
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed Reports Palavras-chave: Australia; Climate change impacts; Marine sector; Resilience assessment; Resilience indicator.
Ano: 2013
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Conceptualizing and Operationalizing Social Resilience within Commercial Fisheries in Northern Australia Ecology and Society
Marshall, Nadine A; CSIRO; nadine.marshall@csiro.au; Marshall, Paul A; Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority; p.marshall@gbrmpa.gov.au.
How can we tell whether resource-dependent people are socially resilient to institutional change? This question is becoming increasingly important as demand for natural resources escalates, requiring resource managers to implement policies that are increasingly restrictive on resource users. Yet policy changes are frequently made without a good understanding of the likely social and economic consequences. Knowledge of the resilience of resource users to changes in resource-use policies can assist in the design and implementation of policies that minimize the impacts on people while maximizing the sustainability of ecosystem goods and services. Despite the appeal of resilience as a framework for sustaining human-environment relations, there has been a...
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed Reports Palavras-chave: Social resilience; Social adaptation; Social impacts; Institutional change; Socio-ecological systems; Integrated research; Policy response; Natural resource management; Fishing; Australia.
Ano: 2007
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Anpernirrentye: a Framework for Enhanced Application of Indigenous Ecological Knowledge in Natural Resource Management Ecology and Society
Walsh, Fiona J.; CSIRO Ecosystem Sciences; Fiona.Walsh@csiro.au; Dobson, Perrurle V.; senior Arrernte woman;; Douglas, Josie C.; CSIRO Ecosystem Sciences; josie.douglas@csiro.au.
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed Synthesis Palavras-chave: Aboriginal economy; Australia; Biodiversity; Bush foods; Cultural values; Desert; Indigenous knowledge system; Natural resource management; Social– Ecological system.
Ano: 2013
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Relatório de viagem à Austrália em missão da EMBRAPA. Infoteca-e
SALVIANO, L. M. C..
Objetivo da viagem foi visitar algumas estações experimentais em Queensland e participar do Simpósio sobre nutrição animal em pastagens (Nutritionallimits to animal production from pastures - An Internqtional Symposiurn).
Tipo: Fôlder / Folheto / Cartilha (INFOTECA-E) Palavras-chave: Relatório de viagem; Nutrição Animal; Pastagem; Animal nutrition; Australia.
Ano: 1981 URL: http://www.infoteca.cnptia.embrapa.br/infoteca/handle/doc/156471
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Relatório de viagem à Austrália em missão da EMBRAPA. Infoteca-e
ALBUQUERQUE, S. G. de.
Tomar parte no Curso "Management of Arid and Semiarid Natural Grazing Lands" (Manejo de Pastagens Nativas de Regiões Áridas e Semi-Áridas).
Tipo: Fôlder / Folheto / Cartilha (INFOTECA-E) Palavras-chave: Relatório; Regiões áridas; Semi-áridas; Viagem; Pastagem; Australia.
Ano: 1981 URL: http://www.infoteca.cnptia.embrapa.br/infoteca/handle/doc/156021
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Agricultura irrigada: desafios e oportunidades para o desenvolvimento sustentável. Infoteca-e
RODRIGUES, L. N.; DOMINGUES, A. F..
RESUMO: O livro está organizado em cinco partes. A parte I trás cinco capítulos técnicos, sendo os três primeiros sobre a agricultura irrigada no Brasil e os dois últimos sobre a agricultura irrigada na Espanha e na Austrália, respectivamente. O capítulo I apresenta uma abordagem geral e ampla sobre agricultura irrigada e aponta caminhos para a produção sustentável de alimento. O capítulo II destaca a evolução da irrigação no Brasil e no mundo. O capítulo III apresenta os desafios e oportunidades da agricultura irrigada no Nordeste do Brasil. O capítulo IV destaca as boas práticas e lições aprendidas da irrigação na Espanha e, por fim, no último capítulo técnico, apresenta-se uma visão da agricultura irrigada na Austrália. A parte II do livro apresenta o...
Tipo: Livro técnico (INFOTECA-E) Palavras-chave: Estado da arte; Boas práticas; Brasil; Estados Unidos; Espanha; Agricultura irrigada; Recursos hídricos; Desenvolvimento sustentável; Australia.
Ano: 2017 URL: http://www.infoteca.cnptia.embrapa.br/infoteca/handle/doc/1081898
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Grazing management in rangeland grassland systems in South and East Australia. Infoteca-e
KHALIL, M. I.; CORDOVIL, C. M. D. S.; FRANCAVIGLIA, R.; HENRY, B.; KLUMPP, K.; KONCZ, P.; LLORENTE, M.; MADARI, B. E.; MUÑOZ-ROJAS, M.; RAINER, N..
1. Related practices. 2. Description of the case study. 3. Context of the case study. 4. Possibility of scaling up. 5. Impact on soil organic carbon stocks. 6. Other benefits of the practice. 7. Potential drawbacks to the practice. 8. Potential barriers for adoption.
Tipo: Capítulo em livro técnico (INFOTECA-E) Palavras-chave: Grazing management; Rangeland soils; Australia.
Ano: 2021 URL: http://www.infoteca.cnptia.embrapa.br/infoteca/handle/doc/1136311
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Novel use of pop‑up satellite archival telemetry in sawsharks: insights into the movement of the common sawshark Pristiophorus cirratus (Pristiophoridae) ArchiMer
Burke, Patrick J; Mourier, Johann; Gaston, Troy F; Williamson, Jane E.
Background Understanding movement patterns of a species is vital for optimising conservation and management strategies. This information is often difficult to obtain in the marine realm for species that regularly occur at depth. The common sawshark (Pristiophorus cirratus) is a small, benthic associated elasmobranch species that occurs from shallow to deep-sea environments. No information is known regarding its movement ecology. Despite this, P. cirrata are still regularly landed as nontargeted catch in the south eastern Australian trawl fisheries. Three individuals were tagged with pop-up satellite archival tags (PSATs) off the coast of Tasmania, Australia, to test the viability of satellite tagging on these small elasmobranchs and to provide novel...
Tipo: Text Palavras-chave: Elasmobranch; Satellite telemetry; Diel vertical migration; Tagging; Pristiophoridae; Australia; Movement.
Ano: 2020 URL: https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00632/74399/74101.pdf
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