Abstract
Islands are important for maintaining a range of biodiversity, cultural and economic values. However, islands around the world face major and complex conservation challenges, often shared across multiple islands. The variety of tenures and uses also means there is a lack of coordination in policy and management. Addressing these challenges requires sharing lessons of success and failure. To facilitate knowledge-sharing, we need to develop common frameworks, platforms, guidelines and legislation to devise, advise and support actions and collaborations aimed to enhance island conservation. These need to consider both human needs and biodiversity, interactions, research, practice, and information sharing across islands. Pathways may include knowledge, data and experience sharing to ensure that cross-State and Territory coordination can disseminate the lessons learned from island projects to island stakeholders and vice versa. We discuss examples of existing organisational management structures that can potentially form the basis for a timely new platform focusing on Australia’s islands. We propose an island alliance be established as a multi-disciplinary platform to improve coordination among Australia’s islands, and to represent Australia’s environmental island challenges and solutions. Such an alliance would aim to bridge island communities, practitioners, managers, researchers and cultural advisors across diverse and complementary spheres along the continuum from biodiversity and ecosystems to people and social entrepreneurship. This alliance would have a mandate to develop national environmental collaborations, research and standards relating to island environments, facilitate business entrepreneurship with complementary outcomes to manage the threats that face Australian islands, and contribute to improving biodiversity conservation outcomes. The platform would draw together practitioners, natural and social scientists, policymakers, and importantly indigenous and non-Indigenous island communities to lead innovative collaborations and support Australian islands.
Subject
Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology
Reference26 articles.
1. The Darwin agreement: a collaboration between Australian restoration organisations in support of the UN decade on ecosystem restoration.;Ecological Management & Restoration,2021
2. Australian Government (2016) ‘Australian Antarctic strategy and 20 year action plan.’ p. 32. (Commonwealth of Australia)
3. Australians together: First Nations kinship (2022) Available at
4. Ball D, Williams J, Christian M (2018) The 4Cs approach to island management. In ‘Australian Island Arks: conservation, management and opportunities’. (Eds D Moro, D Ball, SL Bryant) pp. 61–70. (CSIRO Publishing: Vic.)
5. Bradby K (2013) Gondwana link: 1000 kilometres of hope. In ‘Linking Australia’s landscapes: lessons and opportunities from large-scale conservation networks’. (Eds J Fitzsimons, I Pulsford, G Westcott) pp. 25–35. (CSIRO Publishing: Collingwood)
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献