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Incorporating native vegetation management

Maximising woodland bird diversity in Brigalow Bird forests

Final technical report

Large continuous areas of woodland, such as the eucalypt woodlands of the Brigalow Belt, are potentially significant refugia for fragmentation-sensitive birds, and the area of these woodlands under private and public conservation management is increasing substantially. Yet the avifauna of the apparently relatively intact woodlands shows many of the symptoms typically associated with fragmented agricultural regions, such as domination by a single species, the aggressive noisy miner.

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Incorporating Native Vegetation Management into Agricultural Production Systems

This report presents results of a study into programs and policies that have been, and are being, used to encourage the integration of native vegetation management into agricultural systems. The purpose of the study was to identify information that is imp

Incorporating native vegetation management into agricultural production systems

This project investigated programs and policies that have been used to encourage the integration of native vegetation management into agricultural systems. The purpose of the study was to identify information that is important in enhancing the outcomes from future policies and identify principles to develop improved guidelines for future programs and policies.

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Managing Landscapes to Meet Public Biodiversity and Farm Business Goals

In summary, we have shown that economically, financially and environmentally sound strategies exist for landholders in the mid and upper Goulburn Broken Catchment that will meet catchment management targets. The results indicate possibilities for reorgani

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Landscape design principles for native vegetation management

addressing multiple scales

This Final Report follows 4 Milestone Reports that covered research methods, activities and preliminary results. The sections that follow summarise the project objectives; results achieved against those objectives; communication and adoption activities; p

Landscape design principles for native vegetation management: addressing multiple scales

This project aimed to validate landscape design principles from a previous research project (CTC9) at both the single property and larger micro-catchment scales (e.g. clusters of 5-10 properties), and identify the importance of spatial arrangements of vegetation within landscapes at those scales.