In this video the Warddeken Rangers explain how to set up a camera trap methodology. Camera traps are a simple and effective way to understand what animals are on country.
The Kimberley Ranger Network is facilitated by the KLC and works to realise Indigenous aspirations to look after country while providing real jobs, training and education as well as improving socio economic standards and community well being.
The Kimberley Ranger Network is facilitated by the KLC and works to realise Indigenous aspirations to look after country while providing real jobs, training and education as well as improving socio economic standards and community well being.
A community-led collaborative research project has improved the capacity of the Lama Lama Rangers to monitor wetlands on their country. Working together, the North Australian Indigenous Land and Sea Management Alliance Limited (NAILSMA), South Cape York Catchments (SCYC), and the …
Billiluna is well known for its magnificent wild horses and is on the back foot fighting for their survival as weel as their refreshing water hole Nyanar (Lake Stretch) where they spend most of the time with their families
This film provides an overview of the opportunity to implement the savanna burning methodology
to create carbon credits. It includes animated diagrams that demonstrate how a carbon credit is created. It also explores the non-carbon co-benefits of savanna burning by addressing, …
What would Kalan wetlands look like without feral pigs? That's the question Hub researcher Justin Perry from the CSIRO and the Kalan rangers are asking. The Rangers are setting up an experiment to compare fenced wetlands, which have been protected from threats, to unfenced sites.
Warning Viewers are warned this site contains images,
voices and names of deceased people.
Comments with Facebook