• Stampedes, sharks and cyclones

    Sherry Landow     |      November 28, 2020

    Swimming away from sharks, defending a tent during mini-cyclone and being threatened with a pet dingo are all in a day’s work for coastal researcher Professor Rob Brander.

  • Gippsland lakes revisited

    Max Thomas     |      November 17, 2020

    Incorporating traditional cultural values – such as the idea of soil being a living entity – into science can help restore land and water habitats in the Gippsland Lakes and elsewhere.

  • In praise of pardalotes

    John Woinarski     |      November 15, 2020

    Australia’s four species of pardalotes are unique in the world, but these beautiful small birds are now threatened by forest clearance and the fragmentation of their habitat.

  • Counterpoint by Mark Nicol – Aquaculture: Poaching on the last ecological frontier

    Mark Nicol     |      November 12, 2020

    Over-fishing of wild fish has devastated stocks around the world, but the farming of fish can also have severe ecological impacts.

  • The bee’s knees for pollinators

    Open Forum     |      November 10, 2020

    Researcher at Western Sydney University looking into flowering plant pollination have shown that native bees and exotic European honeybees can support plant pollination together, with different crops and plants attracting different varieties of insect pollinators.

  • Australian carp virus plan ‘dead in the water’?

    Open Forum     |      October 23, 2020

    UK researchers say that the Aussie government’s plan to release a virus into our waterways to kill off non-native carp is unlikely to work, and should be tossed overboard.

  • Confessions – Visions of beauty: Petaurus breviceps

    Mark Nicol     |      October 22, 2020

    The sugar glider (Petaurus breviceps) is one of Australia’s most iconic marsupials. Threatened by habitat destruction across its diminishing range, author Mark Nicol recalls encounters with these and other Australian fauna on a once idyllic South Australian wildlife haven.

  • Counterpoint by Mark Nicol – The degradation of the environmentalist movement

    Mark Nicol     |      October 15, 2020

    The protection of our threatened biosphere remains the vital issue of our times, but the modern environmentalist movement is hampered by its lack of moral grounding, and its hijacking by a range of other causes.

  • Drought increases threat to global wetlands

    Open Forum     |      October 12, 2020

    University of Adelaide scientists have shown how droughts are threatening the health of wetlands around the world.

  • Bilbies return to Sturt National Park

    Isabelle Dubach     |      September 27, 2020

    An iconic nocturnal marsupial has been reintroduced into a feral-free area created by a UNSW-led project. Bilbies create a whole range of habitats by digging for insects, seeds and plant roots, and helping water and carbon infiltrate the soil.

  • Nature cure

    Dimity Williams     |      September 25, 2020

    Australians want a government that takes the health of the natural environment seriously and understands the wellbeing of all of us depend upon it.  

  • Rise of the scorpions

    Open Forum     |      September 24, 2020

    Researchers from La Trobe University have found that, in the absence of natural predators such as bilbies, native scorpions are thriving in Australia’s damaged sandy landscapes.