Held on 28 January 2010, Canberra, ACT.
Presentations in time order
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Presenter: Professor David Lindenmayer Australian National University (ANU) Presentation: Long-term Monitoring Presenter: Dr Brendan Wintle, University of Melbourne, AEDA Deputy Director Presentation: Demonstrating Return on Investment: Optimal monitoring and adaptive management Presenter: Dr Kirsten Parris, University of Melbourne & Dr Sarah Bekessy, RMIT University Presentation: Strategic Landscape Planning Presenter: Dr Richard Fuller, University of Queensland, with Lissa Barr& Dr James Watson, University of Queensland, & Dr Josie Carwardine, CSIRO Presentation: Australia's National Reserve System Presenter: Dr Don Driscoll, Australian National University (ANU) Presentation: Approaches to informing fire management decisions Presenter: Dr Liana Joseph, University of Queensland, with Richard Maloney, Dept of Conservation New Zealand, Prof Hugh Possingham, Dr Judit Szabo, Carissa Klein, Dr James Watson, Jessica Walsh & Madeleine Bottrill, University of Queensland Presentation: Project Prioritisation Protocol (PPP) Presenter: Mr Oscar Venter, University of Queensland, with Prof Hugh Possingham, Dr Kerrie Wilson, Dr Richard Fuller, Takuya Iwamura, University of Queensland, & Prof William Laurence, Smithsonian Institute, & Dr Erik Meijaard, The Nature Conservancy Indonesia Presentation: Conservation in a carbon trading world Presenter: Mrs Carissa Klein, with Matthew Watts, University of Queensland Presentation: Marxan: Advances and Applications |
REFERENCES:
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REFERENCES (either Author's own or mentioned as significant in their talk)
- Likens & Lindenmayer 2010 – new briefs: mapping of long-term work in Aust & develop framework for a workable LTER network nationwide
- Chadès, I., E. McDonald-Madden, M. A. McCarthy, B. A. Wintle, M. Linkie, and H. P. Possingham. 2008. When to stop managing or surveying cryptic threatened species. PNAS 105:13936-13940. (web ref or email author for reprint)
- Duncan, D., and B. A. Wintle. 2008. Towards adaptive management of native vegetation in regional landscapes. in C. Pettit, et al., eds. Landscape Analysis and Visualisation. Springer.
- Garrard, G.E., Bekessy, S.A., McCarthy, M.A., and Wintle, B.A. (2008). When have we looked hard enough? A novel method for setting minimum survey effort protocols for flora surveys. Austral Ecology, 33: 986-998. web .pdf
- Hauser, C. E. and M. A. McCarthy, (2009). "Streamlining 'search and destroy': cost-effective surveillance for invasive species management." Ecology Letters 12: 683-692.
- Joseph L., et al. (in review). Optimal monitoring for conservation. Conservation Biology.
- Joseph, L. N., et. al. 2008. Conservation biology (re cost efficiency)
- McCarthy, M., H. P. Possingham. 2007. Active adaptive management for conservation. Conservation Biology 21:956-963. pdf (540kb)
- McDonald-Madden, E., W. J. M. Probert, C. E. Hauser, M. C. Runge, H. P. Possingham, M. E. Jones, J. L. Moore, T. M. Rout, P. A. Vesk and B. A. Wintle, (IN PRESS 2009). "Active adaptive conservation of threatened species in the face of uncertainty." Ecological Applications.
- McDonald-Madden, E., A. Gordon, B. A. Wintle, S. Walker, H. Grantham, S. Carvalho, M. C. Bottrill, L. N. Joseph, R. Ponce, R. R. Stewart, and H. P. Possingham. 2009. "True" Conservation Progress. Science 323:43-44. (web pdf or email for reprint)
- Rumpff L.,et. al. (in press) Adaptive management of native woodlands. Biological Conservation.
- Wintle, Runge, Bekessy (in review). Efficient monitoring of the unknown unknowns. Ecology Letters.
- Bekessy & Gordon (2007) Nurturing nature in the city. In Steering Sustainability in an Urbanizing World: Policy, Practice and Performance. Ashgate, Great Britain, pp. 227-238.
- Bekessy et al. (in press) The biodiversity bank cannot be a lending bank. Conservation Letters.
- Bekessy et al. (in press) Transparent conservation planning in the urban fringe. Landscape and Urban Planning.
- Bekessy, S. A. and B. A. Wintle, (2008). "Using Carbon Investment to Grow the Biodiversity Bank." Conservation Biology 22(3): 510-513. (web ref or email author for reprint)
- Garrard, G.E., Bekessy, S.A., McCarthy, M.A., and Wintle, B.A. (2008). When have we looked hard enough? A novel method for setting minimum survey effort protocols for flora surveys. Austral Ecology, 33: 986-998. web ref
- Gordon, A., D. Simondson, M. White, A. Moilanen and S. A. Bekessy, (2009). "Integrating conservation planning and landuse planning in urban landscapes." Landscape and Urban Planning 91(4): 183-194. (web ref or email author for reprint)
- Gordon et al. (in prep.) Evaluating biodiversity offset policies, a case study in Melbourne, Australia.
- Langford, W. T., A. Gordon and L. Bastin, (2009). "When do conservation planning methods deliver? Quantifying the consequences of uncertainty." Ecological Informatics 4(3): 123-135. (web ref or email author for reprint)
- Parris (2009) What are strategic impact assessments? Decision Point 32, 4-6.
- Parris, K. M. and Schneider, A. (2009) Impacts of traffic noise and traffic volume on birds of roadside habitats.Ecology and Society 14(1): 29. http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol14/iss1/art29/
- Parris, K. M., M. Velik-Lord and J. North, M.A., (2009). "Frogs Call at a Higher Pitch in Traffic Noise." Ecology & society 14(1): 25. (web ref or email author for reprint)
- Parris, K. M. et al. (2009) Requirements under the EPBC Act and Victorian legislation. Submission to the Growth Areas Authority on the SIA report for the proposed expansion of Melbourne’s urban growth boundary. (email author for reprint)
- Parris, K. M. et al. (2009) Strategic assessments and bioregional planning, with special reference to the SIA for the proposed expansion of Melbourne’s urban growth boundary. Submission on the Interim Report for the Independent Review of the EPBC Act 1999. (email author for reprint)
- Wilson et al. (in prep.) Impacts of climate change and urban development on the spotted marsh frog (Limnodynastes tasmaniensis).
- Boakes, E. H., G. M. Mace, P. J. K. McGowan and R. A. Fuller, (2009). "Extreme contagion in global habitat clearance." Proceedings of the Royal Society B doi:10.1098/rspb.2009.1771.
- Fernandes, P.M. & Botelho, H.S. (2003). A review of prescribed burning effectiveness in fire hazard reduction. Int. J. Wildland Fire, 12, 117-128
- Cary, G., Flannigan, M., Keane, R., Bradstock, R., Davies, I., Lenihan, J., Li, C., Logan, K. & Parson, R. (2009). Relative importance of fuel management, ignition management and weather for area burned: evidence from five landscape-fire-succession models. Int. J. Wildland Fire, 18, 147-156.
- Keeley, J.E. & Zedler, P.H. (2009). Large, high-intensity fire events in southern California shrublands: debunking the fine-grain age patch model. Ecol. Appl., 19, 69-94.
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Bradstock, R., Davies, I., Price, O. & Cary, G. (2008) Effects of climate change on bushfire threats to biodiversity, ecosystem processes and people in the Sydney region. Final Report to the New South Wales Department of Environment and Climate Change [WWW document]. URL http://www.environment.nsw.gov.au/resources/climatechange/BushfireReport2008.pdf.
- Morrison, D.A., Buckney, R.T., Bewick, B.J. & Cary, G.J. (1996). Conservation conflicts over burning bush in south-eastern Australia. Biol. Conserv., 76, 167-175.
- AEDA. 2009. Dial PPP for robust allocation: A transparent and correct method for choosing management priorities for threatened species. Decision Point, 29: 8-10.
- J Szabo, S Briggs, R Lonie, L Bell, I Hunter, RF Maloney, LN Joseph and HP Possingham (2009) The feasibility of applying a cost-effective approach for assigning priorities for threatened species recovery with a case study from New South Wales, Australia. Pacific Conservation Biology
- Joseph, L. N., R. F. Maloney, and H. P. Possingham. 2009. Optimal allocationof resources among threatened Species: a project prioritization protocol. Conservation Biology.23:328-338 pdf ( 206 kb)
- Joseph, LN, HP Possingham (2009) Prioritising projects for the management of threatened macropods of Australia. WWF – Australia
- Joseph, LN, JEM Watson, HP Possingham (2009) The NSW Priority Action Statement and opportunities for maximising return on investment for conservation. Environmental Management and Restoration 10(S1): S143-S144
- Joseph, LN, R Maloney, S O’Connor, P Cromarty, P Jansen, T Stephens & HP Possingham (2008) Improving resource allocation methods for threatened species: the case for a new national approach in New Zealand. Pacific Conservation Biology, 14:154-158
- Maloney, RF, LN Joseph, DG Newman, SM O’Conner & HP Possingham (2009) Development of a new approach to threatened species management in New Zealand. In JM Baxter and CA Galbraith (eds). Species management: Challenges and solutions for the 21st century. TSO Scotland, Edinburgh
- Nowak, R. 2009. 'Flawed' Red List putting species at risk. New Scientist, 11 March 2009:8-9.
- Venter, O., E. Meijaard, H. P. Possingham, R. Dennis, D. Sheil, S. Wich, L. Hovani, and K. A. Wilson. 2009. Carbon payments as a safeguard for threatened tropical mammals. Conservation Letters 2:123-129.pdf (215kb)
- Venter, O., E. Meijaard, and K. A. Wilson. 2008. Strategies and alliances needed to protect forest from palm-oil industry. Nature 45:16. pdf (67kb)
- Bekessy, S. A., B. A. Wintle, A. Gordon, J. C. Fox, R. A. Chisholm, B. Brown, T. J. Regan, N. Mooney, S. M. Read and M. A. Burgman, (2009). "Modelling human impacts on the Tasmanian wedge-tailed eagle (Aquila audax fleayi)." Biological Conservation 142(11): 2438-2448
- Venter, O., W. F. Laurance, T. Iwamura, K. A. Wilson, R. A. Fuller, and H. P. Possingham. 2009. Harnessing Carbon Payments to Protect Biodiversity. Science 326:1368. (doi ref, Science Full Text or email author for reprint) - Supplimentary info
- Venter et al. Cons Biol 2010, other work in progress – decision framework to implement REDD
- Game, E. T., M. E. Watts, S. Woolsdridge, and H. P. Possingham. 2008. Planning for persistence in marine reserves: A questions of catastrophic importance. Ecological Applications 18:670-680. pdf (250Kb) – catastrophic threats
- Hermoso, V. L., S. Linke, H. P. Possingham, and J. Prenda. In press 2009. Addressing longitudinal connectivity in freshwater systematic conservation planning. Freshwater Biology. (in press - contact author for draft) – connectivety
- Klein, C. J., A. Chan, L. Kircher, A. J. Cundiff, N. Gardner, Y. Hrovat, A. J. Scholz, B. E. Kendall, and S. Airame. 2008. Striking a Balance between Biodiversity Conservation and Socioeconomic Viability in the Design of Marine Protected Areas. Conservation Biology 22:691-700. (pdf or contact author) - connectivety
- Carwardine, J., K. Wilson, M. Watts, A. Etter, C. Klein, and H. Possingham. 2008. Avoiding costly conservatation mistakes: the importance of defining actions and costs in spatial priority setting. Plos One 3:e2586. (web or contact author)
- Klein, C. J., C. Steinback, M. E. Watts, A. J. Scholz, and H. P. Possingham. 2009. Spatial marine zoning for fisheries and conservation. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment doi:10.1890/090047. (web pdf or email for reprint)
- Klein, CJ, KA Wilson, M Watts, J Stein, J Carwardine, B Mackey, HP Possingham. 2008. Spatial conservation prioritization inclusive of wilderness quality: a case study of Australia’s biodiversity. Biological Conservation, 142(7): 1282-1290. (web pdf or email for reprint)
- Klein, C. J., K. A. Wilson, M. E. Watts, J. Stein, S. Berry, J. Carwardine, M. Stafford Smith, B. G. Mackey, and H. P. Possingham. 2009. Incorporating ecological and evolutionary processes into continental-scale conservation planning. Ecological Applications 19:206-217. pdf (691Kb)
- Watts, M. E., I. R. Ball, R. R. Stewart, C. J. Klein, K. A. Wilson, C. Steinback, R. Lourival, L. Kircher, and H. P. Possingham. 2009. Marxan with Zones: Software for optimal conservation based land- and sea-use zoning. Environmental Modeling & Assessment 24:1513-1521. (web access or email author)
- Wilson, K. A., E. Meijaard, S. Drummond, H. S. Grantham, L. Boitani, G. Catullo, L. Christie, R. Dennis, I. Dutton, A. Falcucci, L. Maiorano, H. P. Possingham, C. Rondinini, W. Turner, O. Venter, and M. Watts. In Press. Conserving Biodiversity in Production Landscapes. Ecological Applications.



