“It’s all about doing things together in the spirit of reconciliation – righting some of the wrongs. One in, all in,” says Menang-Goreng Elder Eugene Eades of the culturally led burns being carried ...
At first sight, the dry landscape of the Tasmanian Midlands seems an unlikely contender for the title of ‘National Biodiversity Hotspot’. There are only 15 of these hotspots in Australia; areas with ...
The Conversation recently published an important article about the devastating impact that rabbits have had and continue to exert on Australia plants, wildlife and landscapes. The article summarises ...
DJAARA, the Dja Dja Wurrung Clans Aboriginal Corporation, and national conservation not-for-profit Bush Heritage Australia yesterday launched a shared plan to guide landscape management across nearly ...
A Traditional Custodian once told me that ‘if you put your ear to a River Red Gum trunk, you can hear it drinking’.” My colleague Lisa shared this knowledge with a travelling group of our staff and ...
During the Easter holidays, The Budjiti Cultural Camp saw 20 Budjiti people travel to the beautiful Naree station, 150kms NW of Bourke, NSW. Attendees were looking forward to getting out on Country, ...
While the idea of trawling through owl vomit might be nausea-inducing for some (picture skeletal remains, fur and feathers), for our senior ecologist Dr Alex Kutt it’s a clever way to find out more ...
A vegetation-rich pastoral property is using an innovative method to measure landscape health. Sprawling across 167,570 hectares in the Murchison region of Western Australia, Austin Downs teems with ...
There are characters in Bush Heritage’s story like the gibber pebbles that dot the landscape at Evelyn Downs Reserve – they go a long way back. I guess I’m one of those characters. I don’t quite go 2 ...
It’s 44 degrees Celsius and it hasn’t rained in months. Sand dunes and rocky outcrops break up the plains. It’s the Little Sandy Desert of Western Australia, a vast, 11-million-hectare expanse where ...
For the Buloke tree (Allocasuarina luehmannii), which typically takes 100 years to mature, change happens on a peacefully drawn-out timescale, contrasting with the rapid emergence of colourful ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results