A Stunning Accomplishment at
Southern Tanami
www.natureaustralia.org.au
A huge new Indigenous Protected Area is
Australia's largest protected area on land, and the Conservancy is helping to
manage it. 10.15 million hectares.
That’s a huge area of land, roughly 1.3
times bigger than Tasmania.
It also happens to be the size of Southern Tanami Indigenous Protected Area
(IPA), Australia’s newest—and largest—land reserve.
In July 2012, The Nature Conservancy helped
announce the launch of the IPA alongside the Central Land Council and
government representatives from Australia’s National Reserve System. The
Conservancy will support the Traditional
Owners—mostly Warlpiri speakers—who will continue to live on their country and
oversee day-to-day operations of Southern Tanami IPA.
“We’re incredibly
proud to be involved with the Southern Tanami IPA declaration,”
Dr Michael Looker, director of the Conservancy in Australia, says. “It’s an
honor to support Traditional Owners across the Tanami as they seek to manage
Warlpiri country, and we’re excited to work with them to care for their country
in ways that protect its cultural and natural heritage.”
The People's Choice The
decision to declare this expanse of the Tanami desert as an IPA ultimately
comes from the Warlpiri people. The land’s Traditional
Owners have managed it sustainably for thousands of years, and, working alongside
Indigenous Warlpiri Rangers, they will continue to care for their country as
custodians of the IPA.
It’s an area of
immense conservation significance. Over 70 types of birds
call this area of the Tanami desert home; so do roughly 100 reptile species, as
well as threatened, uniquely Australian species such as the bilby, great desert
skink and princess parrot.
But European settlement disrupted the region’s
ecological balance. “In the past our old people looked after country and kept
it strong,” Madeleine Napangardi Dixon, senior Warlpiri ranger, says. “Now there are new problems coming in, like
weeds, feral animals and big wildfires.”
Lending a Hand
Fighting those threats will require both
Indigenous knowledge and conservation science, which is why the Conservancy
will support the Central Land Council Warlpiri rangers to manage the reserve. The Conservancy is contributing $500k toward
the management of Southern Tanami IPA, including paying the salaries of
some of the Warlpiri rangers who’ll be looking after the reserve, and we’ll
offer ongoing advice on the IPA’s management through sitting on its advisory
committee.
On the ground, we’ll help guide fire management
activities facilitated by the Central Land Council's Fire Officer that
forestall dangerous late-season wildfires through prescribed on-ground and
aerial burns and also potentially create financial benefits for Indigenous
communities under Australia’s new carbon trading guidelines. The Conservancy will also assist with
limiting feral species and tracking threatened wildlife, including species
such as the mulgara—a small, carnivorous marsupial.
The Conservancy’s support for Southern Tanami
IPA is an extension of its long-standing commitment to the IPA concept, which
is a robust model for both furthering
the rights and livelihood opportunities of Traditional Owners and
protecting ecologically important lands. In 2009, we helped establish the Warddeken and
Djelk IPAs in Arnhem Land, and Dr Looker sits
on the IPA subcommittee of the National
Reserve System’s Indigenous Advisory Committee.
Linking Up The
Southern Tanami IPA will protect important pieces of the Northern Territory’s
natural legacy. Included in the reserve
are much of Lake Mackay—Australia’s second-largest lake—and an enormous
swath of the Tanami Desert. The IPA will link a variety of habitats that
includes deserts and savannas, giving plant and animal species the space they
need to maneuver around threats like wildfires and climate change.
The IPA will also link existing reserves.
Southern Tanami IPA is a crucial piece
of the Trans-Australia Eco-Link, an ambitious project seeking to create a
3,500-kilometre corridor of land managed for conservation. When completed, the
Eco-Link will stretch from Arnhem Land in the Northern Territory to Port
Augusta in South Australia, making it the largest conservation corridor
initiative in the world.
“That Southern Tanami IPA fills in another
piece of what’s becoming a continent-spanning conservation corridor just adds
to its significance,” Looker says. “This new protected area is immensely
important—for Australia, for its wildlife and for its people.” Copyright © 2013 The Nature
Conservancy
Did anyone hear about this
in the media? Yet more of Australia barred to whites by Abos and their alien handlers.
During the past week we had Eddy McGuire accused of racism and a 13 y.o. white
girl threatened by Adam Goodes(sic), a footy player for calling him an ‘ape’.
But no mention that Goodes’ racial kin were stealing 10 million hectares from Australia’s
whites – and for whose use? Did you KNOW
of the ‘3,500 km wide corridor’ from the North to South i.e. cutting Australia
in half, severing East from West. Not heard of it? Turn off your TV and wake up
to REALITY!
making a lot of white only zones would be a start
ReplyDeleteThanks, a great idea. We hoped in 1997 to begin transferring South Africa's defeated whites here. Our government's, whether Centre-Left or Centre-Right, did not agree. Now 300,000 Asians and Africans arrive each year.
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