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Big Sky Country
Podcast

Big Sky Country

21
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Join conservation organisation Bush Heritage Australia to travel the vast Australian continent: from the flanks of the Mighty Murrumbidgee River in New South Wales where over 40,000 trees have been planted, to the ‘Galapagos of the Kimberley’ where some slimy snails have scientists extremely excited, and across to the ancestral lands of Waanyi and Garawa people where they are keeping culture and biodiversity alive. Meet experts in conservation and Country who are on the ground working to address some of our most pressing environmental threats. Theme music by The Orbweavers. Sign up to our newsletter at www.bushheritage.org.au or follow us on socials @bushheritageaus

Join conservation organisation Bush Heritage Australia to travel the vast Australian continent: from the flanks of the Mighty Murrumbidgee River in New South Wales where over 40,000 trees have been planted, to the ‘Galapagos of the Kimberley’ where some slimy snails have scientists extremely excited, and across to the ancestral lands of Waanyi and Garawa people where they are keeping culture and biodiversity alive. Meet experts in conservation and Country who are on the ground working to address some of our most pressing environmental threats. Theme music by The Orbweavers. Sign up to our newsletter at www.bushheritage.org.au or follow us on socials @bushheritageaus

21
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Oceans of change: Turtles, blue carbon & whale poo

Send us a text From plankton to humpbacks, ocean life is riding massive waves of change – including ocean warming, rising sea levels, acidification and algal blooms.   In the Timor Sea off the Kimberley Coast and over to Agnes Water in Queensland, marine biologists and Wunambal Gaambera Rangers are mapping turtles tracks, monitoring threats to their nests and protecting tiny hatchlings.  Along the humpback highway, wildlife scientist Vanessa Pirotta shares how whales are fertilising the ocean and miraculously adapting to a lack of krill.   And we dive into the world of blue carbon with Dr. Alice Jones – where deep in the waters, we learn that even though our oceans are disproportionately impacted by climate change, they play a mighty role in its defence.   Topics Covered:  How climate change is transforming marine ecosystems  Why turtle sex ratios are shifting with rising temperatures  The surprising ways whales support ocean health  What blue carbon is and why it matters in the climate fight  Guests: Dr Melissa Staines, Vanessa Pirotta, Dr Alice Jones, Tom Vigilante, Desmond Williams, Tabitha Kowan  Support the show Bush Heritage Australia is a leading not-for-profit conservation organisation that works to protect and regenerate millions of hectares of ecologically important land across the continent. This podcast's focus on trees and Country is especially vital to understanding and advancing Australia's conservation future. Get email updates: https://www.bushheritage.org.au/news/subscribe Learn more about the show and our work at www.bushheritage.org.au or follow us on Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn, or X
Science and nature 5 months
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40:03

Traditional knowledge: Healing Country and sharing Indigenous wisdom

Send us a text Traditional Custodians have recorded sea level changes, volcanic shifts and meteoric events for over 10,000 years through story, song, dance and art. Since colonisation, these knowledge systems have faced immense pressure – but Tiahni is solution focused. She traces her own journey to connect with her ancestry and explores how Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander knowledge can strengthen Country to help it adapt.   With Aunty Bernice Hookey, she unpacks epistemic injustice and resilience, before heading to Birriliburu Country to meet Martu women keeping culture strong – and with Joanne Griffin, discovers a powerful new online tool for sharing knowledge, respectfully.   Topics Covered:  How Indigenous knowledge systems inform environmental adaptation  The impact of epistemic injustice on Traditional Custodians  Martu women's role in cultural and ecological resilience  Bush Heritage Australia works in partnership with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities to care for Country, combining millennia-old Traditional Knowledge with modern science – a mission that makes this episode's focus on cultural resilience and knowledge sharing especially powerful.  Guests: Bernice Hookey, Martu women, Jodi Edwards, Joanne Griffin  Support the show Bush Heritage Australia is a leading not-for-profit conservation organisation that works to protect and regenerate millions of hectares of ecologically important land across the continent. This podcast's focus on trees and Country is especially vital to understanding and advancing Australia's conservation future. Get email updates: https://www.bushheritage.org.au/news/subscribe Learn more about the show and our work at www.bushheritage.org.au or follow us on Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn, or X
Science and nature 5 months
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0
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36:46

Working together: Gondwana Link, Aboriginal land, and sustainable farming

Send us a text The landscapes of Southwest Western Australia smack you in the face with their ecological richness, according to Gondwana Link CEO Keith Bradby. He and others – including Bush Heritage – are restoring a 1000km stretch of bushlands in this global biodiversity hotspot, shaped over millions of years by glacial shifts and evolution. For Noongar Elder Lester Coyne it is a place where his people prospered long before the disruptive forces of colonisation.   Today it is surrounded by monotonal agricultural properties. But that doesn’t mean farmers don’t also feel a deep love for nature. The question is how to balance the need to feed and resource our planet, while preserving biodiversity: our biggest natural defense against climate change.    Topics Covered:  Why south-west Western Australia is a global biodiversity hotspot  The vision and progress of the Gondwana Link restoration project  How Traditional Custodians and farmers both care for Country  The role of biodiversity in climate resilience and food security  Guests: Keith Bradby, Lester Coyne, Sylvia Leighton, Stephen Hopper  Support the show Bush Heritage Australia is a leading not-for-profit conservation organisation that works to protect and regenerate millions of hectares of ecologically important land across the continent. This podcast's focus on trees and Country is especially vital to understanding and advancing Australia's conservation future. Get email updates: https://www.bushheritage.org.au/news/subscribe Learn more about the show and our work at www.bushheritage.org.au or follow us on Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn, or X
Science and nature 6 months
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0
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29:52

Surviving the heat: Climate change in deserts, numbats and knowledge

Send us a text Our planet is getting hotter – and deserts, covering 41% of the Earth and nearly 20% of Australia, are on the frontline. What will the sweltering and scorching temperatures mean for the people and species that live there? At Secret Rocks in South Australia, Tiahni joins Dr Katherine Moseby and Jack Bilby who are braving extreme temperatures to help to protect native animals like bilbies and numbats survive. Gareth Catt from the Indigenous Desert Alliance tells of how deserts are changing rapidly, making the practice of reading Country more difficult for Traditional Custodians. Author Clive Hamilton explores resilience as social justice, while Dr. Rebecca Spindler urges bold, science-driven solutions – to make sure people and wildlife alike can handle the heat. Topics Covered: How rising temperatures are transforming Australia’s deserts What’s being done to protect desert wildlife like bilbies and numbats The challenges climate change poses to reading and caring for Country  Why social justice and science must go hand in hand in climate resilience Guests: Dr Katherine Moseby, Jack Bilby, Gareth Catt, Clive Hamilton  Support the show Bush Heritage Australia is a leading not-for-profit conservation organisation that works to protect and regenerate millions of hectares of ecologically important land across the continent. This podcast's focus on trees and Country is especially vital to understanding and advancing Australia's conservation future. Get email updates: https://www.bushheritage.org.au/news/subscribe Learn more about the show and our work at www.bushheritage.org.au or follow us on Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn, or X
Science and nature 6 months
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0
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34:11

Restoring nature: Platypus comeback, oyster reefs and habitat corridors

Send us a text When nature is destroyed and removed, can we ever truly restore it? Across Australia, scientists and communities are sharing powerful stories of ecological restoration – from city rivers to deep-sea reefs. In Adelaide’s River Torrens, urban ecologist Prof. Chris Daniels is leading platypus reintroduction for the city. Downstream near Glenelg beach, one of Australia’s true conservation success stories is occurring underwater: marine scientist Dr Dominic McAfee is restoring oyster reefs, using the sounds of the sea. In Southwest Western Australia – a global biodiversity hotspot – entire ecosystems are being revived from the soil up. Restoration is getting smarter and stronger, one tree, one banksia, one oyster at a time.   Guests:   Dr Dominic Mcafee, shellfish restoration expert Professor Chris Daniels, University Professor and Chair of the Board of Green Adelaide Alex Hams, former Healthy Landscapes Manager, southwest WA, Bush Heritage Australia Support the show Bush Heritage Australia is a leading not-for-profit conservation organisation that works to protect and regenerate millions of hectares of ecologically important land across the continent. This podcast's focus on trees and Country is especially vital to understanding and advancing Australia's conservation future. Get email updates: https://www.bushheritage.org.au/news/subscribe Learn more about the show and our work at www.bushheritage.org.au or follow us on Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn, or X
Science and nature 7 months
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0
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39:57

Trees & Climate: Bob Brown, cultural connection, and why forests matter

Send us a text On an island at the edge of the Earth – Lutruwita/Tasmania – Tiahni sits down with legendary environmentalist Bob Brown. Among flowering blackwoods, they explore tree conservation and community, courage and staying optimistic. She speaks with Pakana Elder Hank Horton on deep cultural ties to trees, and with arboriculturist Dr Gregory Moore about a sobering truth: without trees, humans can’t exist.   These biodiversity magnets store carbon, support life and help us breathe – so why are we still clearing trees? What would the world look like if we protected them instead? Find out more about the vital role of trees in fighting climate change.  Topics Covered:  Why tree conservation is critical to our survival  The emotional and ecological power of trees  The importance of Indigenous ties to Country  Guests: Dr Bob Brown, Gregory Moore, Uncle Hank Horton Support the show Bush Heritage Australia is a leading not-for-profit conservation organisation that works to protect and regenerate millions of hectares of ecologically important land across the continent. This podcast's focus on trees and Country is especially vital to understanding and advancing Australia's conservation future. Get email updates: https://www.bushheritage.org.au/news/subscribe Learn more about the show and our work at www.bushheritage.org.au or follow us on Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn, or X
Science and nature 7 months
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27:08

Big Sky Country Season Three Trailer

Send us a text Prepare for Big Sky Country Season 3, our most expansive season yet. In six captivating new episodes, we take you down the backroads of this diverse country to investigate how biodiversity quietly – and powerfully – offers solutions to the climate crisis.  Hosted by wildlife conservation biologist and proud descendant of the Kaurareg nations Tiahni Adamson – the 2024 Young South Australian of the Year – this series introduces you to people with moving, personal stories who are restoring and protecting ecosystems one block, one banksia, one oyster at a time. If you’re familiar with our first two seasons, you’ll notice one big change - we’ve ventured into the broader conservation space, offering up big ideas, big voices and big solutions.   You'll meet die-hard conservationists safeguarding tree species that dinosaurs once ate. Scientists measuring the body temperatures of desert animals to help them survive climate change. Traditional Custodians who are reading the signals from plants, animals, landscapes and Country – physically, spiritually, emotionally – and lending their knowledge to show us all how to live in balance, so that we don’t simply survive, but thrive. Subscribe now Support the show Bush Heritage Australia is a leading not-for-profit conservation organisation that works to protect and regenerate millions of hectares of ecologically important land across the continent. This podcast's focus on trees and Country is especially vital to understanding and advancing Australia's conservation future. Get email updates: https://www.bushheritage.org.au/news/subscribe Learn more about the show and our work at www.bushheritage.org.au or follow us on Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn, or X
Science and nature 7 months
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0
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02:34

Learning Garawa

It’s a two-day drive from Darwin to Robinson River, on Garawa Country in the NT, just south of the Gulf of Carpentaria. While the road there can be long, the destination is worth it. The annual Waanyi Garawa Biodiversity and Culture Camp brings together Elders, rangers and kids together to keep their culture and language strong.   While remote communities face many challenges without easy access to country, these camps create an opportunity for dance, storytelling and play, and for community leaders to pass down important ecological and cultural knowledge to the next generation.  Featuring Aunty Nancy McDinny, Uncle Jack Green, Karen Noble, Donald Shadforth, Dr Terry Mahney, and Kelly Retief.  Produced by Will Sacre and Eliza Herbert.  Support the showLearn more about our work at www.bushheritage.org.au or follow us on Instagram, Twitter, LinkedIn, or Facebook.
Science and nature 2 years
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16:40

Farmer wants some biodiversity

It might seem strange for an ecologist to spend time on pastoral lands, but that’s exactly what Imogen Semmler does. She ‘meanders’ across paddocks to measure the health of their ecosystems and quantify their biodiverse value.  With over 58% of Australia managed for agricultural production, Imogen’s work is part of a new ‘natural capital accounting’ initiative that recognises that if we are to feed and clothe our planet, while protecting it, then we need to be looking at innovative ways to boost ecosystem health across agricultural lands. Part of the solution? Putting biodiversity on the books.   Featuring Imogen Semmler, Associate Professor Jim Radford, Angela Hawdon and Anna and Gus Hickman. Produced by Bee Stephens and Eliza Herbert. Support the showLearn more about our work at www.bushheritage.org.au or follow us on Instagram, Twitter, LinkedIn, or Facebook.
Science and nature 2 years
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0
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22:22

The return of the right-way burn

In 2021, Wiradjuri Elder Uncle James Ingram and Bush Heritage’s Aboriginal Partnerships Manager and Yuin Walbunja woman, Vikki Parsley, walked across Tarcutta Hills Reserve in southern NSW in search of cultural artefacts. Immediately, they called for a cultural burn. The land was in need of controlled fire, and it presented an opportunity to get Wiradjuri people back out on Country.     This was to be the first cultural burn held on a Bush Heritage reserve in New South Wales, and the beginning of a significant conversation about how fire has and hasn't been used in the continent’s southeast for centuries. Featuring Uncle James Ingram, Vikki Parsley, Dean Freeman, and George and Win Maine. Produced by Will Sacre and Eliza Herbert.  Support the showLearn more about our work at www.bushheritage.org.au or follow us on Instagram, Twitter, LinkedIn, or Facebook.
Science and nature 2 years
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20:00

People have the power

What does it take to restore a native woodland? A bucket, hammer, trowel, seedlings and a whole heap of people power. These ingredients are abundant at Scottsdale Reserve on Ngarigo and Ngunnawal Country in New South Wales where for over seven years, volunteers have been showing up week after week to help plant over 40,000 trees. While their efforts might seem small in a global context, what they prove is that where there’s a will, there’s a way. And where’s there’s people, there’s the power to change the world for better.   Conservation is a people issue; we’ve caused the problems and we have the power to fix the problems – while having a whole heap of green-thumbed fun.   Featuring Phil Palmer, Kim Jarvis, Antia Brademann and Scottsdale volunteers.  Produced by Coco McGrath and Eliza Herbert. Support the showLearn more about our work at www.bushheritage.org.au or follow us on Instagram, Twitter, LinkedIn, or Facebook.
Science and nature 2 years
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0
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19:26

A snail of a time

Amongst inland wulo (rainforest) and on islands in the North Kimberley, Wunambal Gaambera Country, lives an unassuming group of animals. The species slime their way along the forest floor eating decaying leaf litter and are part of why this extraordinary region is listed as an area of national heritage significance – they are an incredibly diverse group of... snails!   Since the late eighties, Wunambal Gaambera Traditional Owners and scientists have led a series of expeditions to the archipelago off the coast to better understand their rich biodiversity. The findings? 'The Galapagos of the Kimberley,' and remarkable ecosystems, all protected by Wunambal Gaambera people.   Featuring Tom Vigilante, Jeremy Kowan, Desmond Williams, Frank Koehler and Norm McKenzie.  Produced by Bee Stephens and Eliza Herbert.  Support the showLearn more about our work at www.bushheritage.org.au or follow us on Instagram, Twitter, LinkedIn, or Facebook.
Science and nature 2 years
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24:34

Call me by your birdsong

Can you imagine nature without sound? No bellbirds, or lyrebirds. No bleating frogs or whispering leaves. No nature’s call to tell the story of the wonder of the forest.   For some scientists seeing is believing, but for Bush Heritage ecologist Daniella Teixiera it’s hearing that is believing. With the support of Woodland Bird Ecologist Courtney Melton, Teixiera is leading a large-scale acoustic monitoring project to measure the condition of woodland bird communities in Queensland.    Their ethos is that a rich soundscape, is a healthy landscape, and that sound is a vital solution to land management and protection.   Featuring Dr Daniella Teixiera, Dr Courtney Melton and Professor Paul Roe. Produced by Coco McGrath and Eliza Herbert. Support the showLearn more about our work at www.bushheritage.org.au or follow us on Instagram, Twitter, LinkedIn, or Facebook.
Science and nature 2 years
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22:07

Big Sky Country Season Two Trailer

Join us in April 2023 for season two of Big Sky Country, bringing stories from the bush to wherever you get your podcasts. Join conservation organisation Bush Heritage Australia to travel the vast Australian continent: from the flanks of the Mighty Murrumbidgee River in New South Wales where over 40,000 trees have been planted in an effort to restore a native woodland, to the “Galapagos of the Kimberley” where some slimy snails and their genetic evolution have scientists extremely excited, and across to the ancestral lands of the Waanyi and Garawa people where Elders and rangers are keeping culture and biodiversity alive. Meet the people on the ground who are experts in ecology, culture, conservation and Country and how they are finding solutions - old and new - to some of our most pressing environmental issues.     Subscribe now. Support the showLearn more about our work at www.bushheritage.org.au or follow us on Instagram, Twitter, LinkedIn, or Facebook.
Science and nature 3 years
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0
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02:18

The sandalwood tree

If every scent tells a story, the Australian Sandalwood Tree (Santalum Spicatum) must be a library; rich with ecological, cultural and economic history books.   But today, much of this history is at risk, with unsustainable harvesting, climate change and feral predators pushing the tree perilously close to extinction.   In this episode, we drive down the Gunbarrel Highway to the Birriliburu Indigenous Protected Area in WA's central deserts to find some of the oldest sandalwood trees in the world. Underneath their scrambling canopies, we ask: How are they going in the wild? What makes these trees so special? And what does their future hold? Produced by Eliza Herbert and Kate Thorburn. Support the showLearn more about our work at www.bushheritage.org.au or follow us on Instagram, Twitter, LinkedIn, or Facebook.
Science and nature 3 years
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0
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18:27

Clouds build up, fruits flower, Indigenous seasons change

When you think of the seasons, does Spring begin on the first day of September? Summer on the first of December? Or is it the Wet season on the first of November? The Dry season on the first of May?   Unlike Gregorian or Western Calendars, Aboriginal calendars are not based on structural time, but ecological time, and they are strongly embedded in place.   Different phases of plant and animal lifecycles, variations in animal behaviours, cloud formations and wind directions can indicate the right time to harvest different plants and foods, and the right time to burn different vegetation types. But lately, with an acceleration of climate change, the seasons aren't always as they used to be.  In this episode, we take you to central Arnhem Land to hear from Rembarrnga and Dalabon people about their seasonal calendars and community-wide effort to keep language, culture and country strong.  Produced by Eliza Herbert (host), Katie Degnian and Amelia Caddy. Support the showLearn more about our work at www.bushheritage.org.au or follow us on Instagram, Twitter, LinkedIn, or Facebook.
Science and nature 3 years
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19:15

Red fins, blue eyes, can't lose

When there's one single population of a species left in the world, what do you do? Do you let it go extinct? Or do you do everything you can to save it?   In central Queensland, a collective effort is bringing one teeny, tiny fish back from the brink of extinction: the Red-finned Blue-eye.  In this episode, we take you to its home, where water, deep in the mantle of the earth below, has travelled up to the surface of an arid, inland environment and given rise to what some scientists have called the 'most significant natural springs for global biodiversity in the Great Artesian Basin.'   So, how did the fish come to be here in the first place? And what's being done to save it?  Support the showLearn more about our work at www.bushheritage.org.au or follow us on Instagram, Twitter, LinkedIn, or Facebook.
Science and nature 4 years
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17:13

Where there's water, there's life

Naree Station Reserve on Budjiti country in New South Wales might look dry on most days of the year, but when the water arrives, by rain or flood, the landscape comes alive. Dry soil transforms into wetlands full of frogs singing, waterbirds flocking and insects buzzing. They call it boom and bust country, out the back o' Bourke, and it is part of the last unregulated river system in the Murray Darling Basin.   Water has sustained people, plants and animals for millennia, but in recent decades, Budjiti people have seen water, and the species that depend on it, disappearing.  How much more can we stand to lose? Guests: Vanessa Westcott, Greg Carroll, Phil Eulo.  Produced by Eliza Herbert and Amelia Caddy Support the showLearn more about our work at www.bushheritage.org.au or follow us on Instagram, Twitter, LinkedIn, or Facebook.
Science and nature 4 years
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0
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23:13

The secret life of phascogales

Climb up the tree. Open the nest box. And look inside the lives of Red-tailed Phascogales.  These small arboreal marsupials - with their big ears, big eyes and fluffy red tails - are just as loveable as koalas and kangaroos, but with a few big differences. They can fit in the palm of your hand. They have death-inducing mating habits. And, while they were once widespread across the southern half of Australia, they are now mostly restricted to the wheatbelt region of Western Australia.   Over a decade ago, a small group of these phascogales were bundled up, driven 100 kilometers and translocated to their new home: Kojonup Reserve on Wagyl Kaip and Southern Noongar country in WA. Today, we find out how the population is surviving.  Guests: Angela Sanders, Dr Michelle Hall and Dr Tony Friend Produced by Eliza Herbert and Amelia Caddy Support the showLearn more about our work at www.bushheritage.org.au or follow us on Instagram, Twitter, LinkedIn, or Facebook.
Science and nature 4 years
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19:52

From little trees, climate resilience grows

The climate has always changed. But in recent years, these changes have gotten drastically faster and more noticeable. So much so that, in some cases, they are causing trees to die.   Grey Box and Yellow Box trees form the eucalypt backbone of Bush Heritage's Nardoo Hills Reserve on Dja Dja Wurrung country in central Victoria, providing crucial habitats for all sorts of woodland birds, insects and tree-dwelling mammals. So, when the woodlands began to die in 2008 and again in 2014, Bush Heritage scientists and volunteers devised a plan: an innovative climate-ready experiment to help keep trees in the landscape as temperatures rise and rainfall decreases. Guests:  Dr Garry McDonald, Dr Kate Fitzherbert & Harley Douglas  Support the showLearn more about our work at www.bushheritage.org.au or follow us on Instagram, Twitter, LinkedIn, or Facebook.
Science and nature 4 years
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17:27
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