Reading the Country is a series created by Warlpiri knowledge holders from the Northern and Southern Tanami Indigenous Protected Ares with the Central Land Council.
Reading the Country is a series created by Warlpiri knowledge holders from the Northern and Southern Tanami Indigenous Protected Ares with the Central Land Council.
Luckily, the majority of the IPA is free of weeds, especially sandhill and rocky hill country. At water places or access tracks, weeds can come in. Most weeds are found close to Lajamanu and near outstations.
Too many weeds mean that native plants decline. In weed areas, fires …
Changed fire regimes represent the single greatest threat to the cultural and ecological values of the IPA.
Northern Tanami Indigenous Protected Area (IPA) committee members directed the CLC to re-imagine their IPA Plan of Management, an English-heavy guide book for looking …
Since Yapa stopped walking their country, many changes have occurred. These changes include the introduction and proliferation of feral animals and weeds species, altered fire regimes and changes in water quality at important wetlands due to feral animal impacts.
Cats and foxes …
The Yuku Baja Muliku people are the Traditional Custodians of Archer Point, which is located 20km South of Cooktown, North Queensland. Watch this fantastic story of five turtles being released back into the wild after nearly 2 years of rehabilitation at the Yuku Baja Muliku …
This video provides an overview of how Traditional Owners in the north Kimberley are taking care of country and reducing greenhouse gas emissions through traditional fire management. Traditional Owners in the North Kimberley are applying the Carbon Farming Initiative savanna …
Reading the Country is a series created by Warlpiri knowledge holders from the Northern and Southern Tanami Indigenous Protected Ares with the Central Land Council.
Warning Viewers are warned this site contains images,
voices and names of deceased people.
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