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Cows, cockies and atlases : use and abuse of biodiversity monitoring in environmental decision making

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posted on 2012-01-01, 00:00 authored by James FitzsimonsJames Fitzsimons
Lesson #I. Good long-term monitoring makes for informed and confident decisions on land management.
Lesson #2. Monitoring showing species and habitat decline can directly lead to better protection mechanisms.
Lesson #3. Results of monitoring can be ignored, misused and misquoted to achieve political ends.
Lesson #4. Are we seeing a decline in systematic species surveys by government?
Lesson #5. We don't know enough about what monitoring is happening and why monitoring isn't happening.
Lesson #6. Disparate data sets and cumbersome collection methods are hindering species status monitoring.
Lesson #7. Make better use of existing resomces and expertise.
Lesson #8. Make monitoring data more accessible and enable it to be more repeatable.
Lesson #9. Embed the requirement for monitoring in biodiversity and threatened species legislation.
Lesson #10. Understand better the social elements of ecological monitoring

History

Title of book

Biodiversity monitoring in Australia

Chapter number

10

Pagination

91 - 99

Publisher

CSIRO Publishing

Place of publication

Collingwood, Vic.

ISBN-13

9780643103573

Language

eng

Publication classification

B1 Book chapter

Extent

22

Editor/Contributor(s)

D Lindenmayer, P Gibbons

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