james cook university – Michmutters
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Australia

‘Major barriers’ to restoring Australia’s degraded coastal ecosystems as scientists push for national plan

Squeezed between tropical wetlands and the Great Barrier Reef, the wetlands of Mungalla Station should be a colorful haven teeming with life.

The former pastoral property in north Queensland was, until not long ago, choked with weeds and devoid of fish.

James Cook University’s Center for Tropical Water and Aquatic Ecosystem Research associate professor Nathan Waltham describes efforts to restore it to health as the most rewarding project he has ever worked on.

It involved seven years of exchanging scientific knowledge with the Nywaigi traditional owners.

“It’s been a two-way learning street and seeing country slowly healing and seeing the Indigenous rangers become so inspired, creating jobs for Indigenous youth has just been so rewarding,” Dr Waltham said.

“Unfortunately, it’s very small scale, and we need to now be thinking about this as an example that can be taken to much larger scales.”

Harder than it needs to be

Restoration projects like the one at Mungalla have experienced success around Australia.

But new research led by Megan Saunders, a senior research scientist at the CSIRO’s oceans and atmosphere division, and Dr Waltham reveals there are major barriers to projects going ahead at the scale required to restore the nation’s degraded coasts.

An aerial image of a wetland surrounded by tropical green vegetation.
Mungalla Station is now restored to a coastal wetland.(Supplied)

They found there was insufficient funding to restore many degraded sites and that Australia lacked a consistent approach to mapping and classifying coastal and marine ecosystems.

Processes to engage with traditional owners on restoration projects are often not even executed, they found.

Mungalla’s health has also slightly declined since its restoration project concluded, highlighting the need for ongoing love and care.

Sometimes when restoration projects do receive funding, they are brought unstuck by complex approval processes.

“[It can be] anywhere from 50 per cent, 60 per cent of the allocated funding time just to get the approval and, unfortunately, that is a challenge we have to break down,” Dr Waltham said.

“That has possibly huge implications on projects even starting.”

A portrait image of a smiling woman wearing glasses and a blue top, standing in front of the sea and mountains in the background.
Dr Saunders is the lead author of the research into scaling up coastal and marine restoration work.(ABC Far North: Christopher Testa)

Climate the biggest threat

The main threat to coastal low-lying areas is, unsurprisingly, climate change and its associated threats such as more severe storms.

Scientists this month confirmed frequent El Niño events caused hundreds of kilometers of coastal mangroves in the Gulf of Carpentaria to die.

Dr Saunders, who specializes in coastal and marine restoration, said Australia needed a national plan to restore coastal ecosystems, involving state and local governments, First Nations people, philanthropic groups and the finance sector.

Examples of coastal restoration in environments that have been irreversibly altered include the retrofitting of seawalls in Sydney Harbor to make them a more suitable habitat for marine life to flourish.

Dr Saunders said adopting a road map similar to the one set out in their research paper could make Australia a “world leader” in coastal restoration.

Indigenous Rangers from the Carpentaria Land Council look at dead mangroves
Mangroves along the coast of the Gulf of Carpentaria have died in recent years due to the effects of climate change.(ABC North West Queensland: Lucy Murray)

Meanwhile, she said, across the nation, there was a lot of work to do.

“Oyster reefs in Australia have declined by 92 per cent since the arrival of Europeans and the coastal development activities that have happened,” Dr Saunders said.

“We’ve also lost 95 per cent of Tasmanian kelp beds more recently due to warming water temperatures, so our natural assets, in particular, are in decline due to climate change.”

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Categories
Australia

Infectious disease experts warn Omicron wave not the last of Australia’s COVID-19 pandemic

Infectious disease experts have warned that, while Australia might have passed the peak of its winter COVID-19 wave, there could still be future surges and strains of the deadly virus in the future.

James Cook University’s Professor Emma McBryde told the ABC that, while she was “cautiously optimistic” about the latest Omicron wave being over, there was still a risk of new COVID-19 variants.

“We’re still seeing a lot of deaths, [more than] 100 a day across Australia, which is an alarming number,” she said.

“We should be concerned about it rather than just dismissing it, but we should be cautiously optimistic that, bit by bit, we’re going to see a decline in cases in the medium term.

“I’m much-less optimistic about it being all over, as in the whole COVID pandemic being over,” she said.

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“Because we’ve seen this virus mutate again and again, and some of those mutations make it milder and more infectious, and other mutations make it more severe and more infectious.

“So we don’t know what’s coming next.

“I wouldn’t be bold enough to make any statements on [the end of the pandemic].”

On Wednesday, Australia recorded 27,263 new cases of COVID-19 and 133 deaths. There were 4,415 cases being treated in hospital.

Federal Health Minister Mark Butler also said last week he was cautiously optimistic the most-recent wave had peaked.

“The data we’re seeing right now indicates we might have reached the peak earlier than we expected to,” he said on August 4.

A man in a dark suit and spotted tie speaks at a press conference while another man, head tilted back, looks on from behind
Health Minister Mark Butler has warned of the “school holiday effect” on case numbers. (ABC News: Matt Roberts)

“We’re being a bit cautious about that because what we’ve seen through the pandemic is the ‘school holiday effect’, which shows numbers and transmission takes a slightly different course because of different activity in the school holidays.”

Professor Robert Booy — an infectious diseases pediatrician at the University of Sydney — said there was a “lot of good news.”

“The possibility of a new variant remains there, but we don’t see one on the horizon,” he said.

“[The Indian sub variant BA2.75] has fizzled out and we’ve had BA5 now for six months without a new variant taking over.

“So our immunity to BA5 is getting better and better.

A bearded, brown-haired man in a maroon, checked shirt and maroon knitted vest in an office environment
Professor Robert Booy warns against complacency towards COVID-19. (ABC: 7.30)

“There isn’t a variant yet that looks likely to replace it, so there is hope on the horizon.”

However, I added, it was “no time for complacency.”

“We’re still seeing rampant deaths,” he said.

“It’s in front of our eyes and we’re looking at it with rose-tinted glasses. We’re seeing the positive and forgetting so many people are still dying and being damaged.”

He said the elderly and disabled were, “first of all”, precious people.

University of South Australia epidemiologist and biostatistician Professor Adrian Esterman said three key things needed to be done to improve case numbers:

  1. 1.Higher percentage of the population getting their booster shot
  2. two.Encouraging correct usage of face masks in the correct places
  3. 3.Better ventilation of indoor areas.

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