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Tactical Research Fund: Indigenous turtle and dugong conservation comic

Project number: 2008-307
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $62,010.00
Principal Investigator: Paul Pak Poy
Organisation: Department of Agriculture Fisheries and Forestry
Project start/end date: 28 Feb 2008 - 1 Mar 2009
Contact:
FRDC

Need

This is project will develop a “Indigenous Turtle and Dugong Conservation Comic” project for the Department of Agriculture Fisheries and Forestry that increases the understanding of Indigenous dugong and turtle fishermen about species sustainability and the population impacts if extraction continues at current levels.

The Torres Strait region is characterised by a complex marine ecosystem, which supports globally significant populations of dugong and marine turtles. Torres Strait is the most important dugong habitat in the world and the region has six of the seven species of marine turtles.

Within Torres Strait there are nineteen Indigenous communities distributed across seventeen geographically remote islands stretching to the south-western coast of Papua New Guinea and the northern tip of Cape York Peninsula. These communities are very diverse in terms of their socio-economic, cultural and political characteristics. Each community also has differing priorites, needs and concerns in relation to local issues affecting turtle and dugong.

Story telling is the basis for Indigenous communication. Families prefer messages as stories because they resonate with people's day to day experience and have been the cornerstone of passing on culture and values. Many organisations now understand the value of this form of communication. This project, to develop a series of educational comic books in collaboration with Island youth, is needed to develop grassroots knowledge of conservation and fisheries management, and committment to sustainable practices for harvest of dugong and turtle.

This knowledge and committment is necessary to ensure young Indigenosu school students understand the environemental impacts of traditional harvest of marine turtle and duging, and in turn to ensure the sustainability of traditional hunting practice.

Objectives

1. To design, produce and distribute a comic book that will raise awareness for sustainable dugong and turtle harvest among the children of the Torres Strait, their families, and dugong and turtle fishers
People
PROJECT NUMBER • 2008-306
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Building economic capability to improve the management of marine resources in Australia

This project includes the following appendices and videos:2008-306 Appendix C Individual FRDC Student Reports.pdf2008-306 Appendix D Student publications.pdf2008-306 Appendix E Student Project Videos.pdfAnna Farmery talks about her research - [video]Peggy Schrobback talks about her...
ORGANISATION:
University of Tasmania (UTAS)

Australian society for fish biology annual national workshop 2008: assessment of recreational fisheries - current strategies, challenges and future directions

Project number: 2008-301
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $20,000.00
Principal Investigator: Charles A. Gray
Organisation: Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development (NSW)
Project start/end date: 30 Jun 2008 - 29 Jun 2009
Contact:
FRDC

Need

There is a growing need not only to assess recreational fisheries throughout Australia, but to undertake these assessments in a cost-effective manner and produce deliverables that management and the recreational fishing community can readily adopt. The National Recreational and Indigenous Fishing Survey was undertaken in 2000-2001, and since this survey, most fisheries agencies have been grappling with how to complete robust and cost-effective surveys within their jurisdiction. There is a strong need for greater collaboration among scientists, managers and stakeholders from the different jurisdictions, to review and critique existing and new methods so that future surveys produce better outcomes at lower costs.

ASFB workshops have been held each year since 1985. The 2008 ASFB workshop is an ideal and timely opportunity for researchers, managers, students and stakeholders to cooperatively critique and strategically develop a framework for testing methodologies and designing assessments of recreational fisheries throughout Australia.

Objectives

1. The broad objective of the workshop is to discuss and develop robust, cost-effective and comparative methodologies to assess recreational fisheries throughout Australia. Specific objectives include:
2. review existing approaches
3. critique new approaches
4. develop a framework for assessing recreational fisheries in Australia.
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