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S6.E8 Maree Baade, Tablelands Regional Council

Reef And Rivers Podcast

Release Date: 10/22/2024

S6.E9 Dr Matt Curnock, Human Dimensions of Waterway Health show art S6.E9 Dr Matt Curnock, Human Dimensions of Waterway Health

Reef And Rivers Podcast

Dr Matt Curnock is a senior research scientist at CSIRO in Townsville. His work in social and environmental science is focused on understanding how people perceive, value and interact with the Great Barrier Reef.  Given that 'managing the environment is actually about managing people', social science offers insights into reef programs and policies. 

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S6.E8 Maree Baade, Tablelands Regional Council show art S6.E8 Maree Baade, Tablelands Regional Council

Reef And Rivers Podcast

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S6.E7 Travis Sydes, Biosecurity and the Threat of Amazon Frogbit show art S6.E7 Travis Sydes, Biosecurity and the Threat of Amazon Frogbit

Reef And Rivers Podcast

Travis Sydes managing natural resources in Far North Queensland as part of FNQROC, which represents 10 local governments across the region. In this podcast he talks about biosecurity issues in the Wet Tropics with a particular focus on Amazon frogbit, an aquarium plant that is infesting local waterways. 

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S6.E6 Geoff McClure, Restoring Cattana Wetlands show art S6.E6 Geoff McClure, Restoring Cattana Wetlands

Reef And Rivers Podcast

Geoff McClure is one of hundreds of conservation volunteers who have helped transform Cattana Wetlands in the north of Cairns into an environmental park. In this podcast he talks about his love of conservation and the work that has gone into restoring the biodiversity hotspot at Cattana.  

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S6.E5 Barbara Wueringer, Discovering The Elusive Sawfish show art S6.E5 Barbara Wueringer, Discovering The Elusive Sawfish

Reef And Rivers Podcast

Zoologist Dr Barbara Wueringer talks about her work with the fascinating sawfish her research of and how trawling through old newspaper clippings from the Gold Rush era helped to understand more about its historic distribution before gill nets and trophy fishing decimated it's populations.

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S6.E4 Matt Moore, Fish Passage show art S6.E4 Matt Moore, Fish Passage

Reef And Rivers Podcast

Fisheries ecologist Matt Moore from Catchment Solutions talks about why fish habitat connectivity within waterways is so important and how decisions made to fix fish barriers such as weirs and dams. 

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S6.E3 Sam Bastounas, Using Seaweed to Strip Nutrients from Water show art S6.E3 Sam Bastounas, Using Seaweed to Strip Nutrients from Water

Reef And Rivers Podcast

Sam Bastounas is the CEO of Pacific Bio, an Australian company that develops green technology to address water quality and food security issues. In this podcast, Sam discusses the challenge of purifying water and the development of RegenAqua, a new technology developed with JCU that uses seaweed to strip nutrients from water before it enters waterways. 

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S6.E2 Heidi Tait, Cleaning Up Marine Debris show art S6.E2 Heidi Tait, Cleaning Up Marine Debris

Reef And Rivers Podcast

Heidi Tait is the founder and Managing Director of Tangaroa Blue, a not for profit organisation focused on removing and preventing marine debris. In this podcast, Heidi talks about the problem of litter in our oceans and the importance of going beyond beach clean ups to tackle debris at its source.  

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S6.E1 Phil Laycock, Results of the 2024 Wet Tropics Waterway Health Report Card show art S6.E1 Phil Laycock, Results of the 2024 Wet Tropics Waterway Health Report Card

Reef And Rivers Podcast

This is the 9th annual Wet Tropics Waterway Health Report Card to be released by Wet Tropics Waterways to assess the health and condition of freshwater basins, estuaries, inshore and offshore areas of the Wet Tropics in Far North Queensland.  Independent Chair Phil Laycock explains some of the key findings in 2024.

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S5.E10 Dr Robert Walsh, Micro invertebrates in waterways show art S5.E10 Dr Robert Walsh, Micro invertebrates in waterways

Reef And Rivers Podcast

Micro invertebrates are tiny creatures that are invisible to the naked eye but form the basis of the food web in our waterways. Dr. Robert Walsh talks about the importance and diversity of microfauna for sustaining aquatic systems and reveals that their eggs can remain viable for up to 400-500 years, meaning that extinct species could come alive again if water is added!      

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