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How to feed a growing population healthy food without ruining the planet
Mario Herrero | January 18, 2019If we’re serious about feeding the world’s growing population healthy food, and not ruining the planet, we need to get used to a new style of eating.
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Listening in to Murray-Darling wildlife
Open Forum | January 18, 2019A Griffith researcher, working with the Goulburn Broken Catchment Management Authority in Victoria, is eavesdropping on wildlife ecosystems to monitor wetland restoration outcomes after changes in water allocations.
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Have you seen a sawfish?
Niall Byrne | January 11, 2019People around Australia are being urged to recount their encounters with sawfish to chart the decline of the magnificent but threatened species around Australia.
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Act locally, think globally on environmental issues
Terry Bowles | January 7, 2019Many people worry about environmental issues, and despair at the lack of effective political policy to tackle them, but taking individual action can make a positive improvement to the world around us and our state of mind.
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The global big dry
Wilson da Silva | January 4, 2019Much of Australia has suffered drought in recent months, and global water supplies also shrinking, even as the amount of rainfall is on the rise. The culprit? The drying of soils due to climate change.
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Litter is more dangerous than sharks at the beach
Marnie Campbell | January 3, 2019Shark attacks are rare but grab the headlines, yet beach litter and marine debris injures one-fifth of beach users, particularly children and older people.
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Saving Tasmania’s giant freshwater lobster
Open Forum | January 1, 2019Tasmania’s giant freshwater crayfish is the largest freshwater invertebrate in the world, growing up to a metre in length and living for 80 years, but the iconic “lobster” is now threatened across northern Tasmania because of illegal fishing and habitat loss.
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Stick to the path to stay out of trouble in our National Parks
Edmund Goh | December 28, 2018The main risks encountered when venturing into the wilderness – from falling off cliffs and waterfalls to deadly snakebites or getting lost – can all be reduced by one crucial piece of advice: stick to the path.
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The loss of inter-tidal ecosystems exposes coastal communities
Nick Murray | December 24, 2018In a world-first study of its kind, UNSW and UQ researchers used artificial intelligence and extensive satellite imagery to find that intertidal zones around the globe have receded.
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How extreme weather events batter wildlife populations
Open Forum | December 22, 2018A third of Australia’s spectacled flying foxes died in an extreme heatwave north of Cairns in November and new research has shed more light on the devastating effect such weather events can have on wildlife populations.
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Queensland sharks suffer sharp decline
Open Forum | December 17, 2018While the media portrays sharks as a threat to humanity, the reality is that human action has devastated shark populations around the world, with falls of up to 90% in Queensland’s coastal sharks over the last 50 years.
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Invasive species and habitat loss threaten our biodiversity
Open Forum | December 12, 2018Invasive species and habitat loss are the biggest threats to Australian biodiversity, according to new research by the Threatened Species Recovery Hub in partnership with The University of Queensland.

