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House of Representatives Standing Committee on Climate Change, Environment and the Arts
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Preliminary pages
Foreword
Since the June 2011 referral of this inquiry into
Australia’s biodiversity in a changing climate, the Committee has engaged in an
extensive evidence-gathering process to adequately address the broad terms of
reference. The Committee has travelled around the country to ensure a broad
representation of issues relevant across Australia, inspecting many ecosystems
of national importance and visiting research and other facilities relevant to
the inquiry’s terms of reference. I am pleased to note that the Committee has
conducted inquiry activities, including site inspections, briefings and public
hearings, in each of Australia’s states and territories.
Although the Committee has completed its formal program of
interstate site inspections, it continues to gather evidence to the inquiry
through briefings and hearings. This second interim report is therefore
intended to provide an update on the progress of inquiry and the important
themes canvassed during site inspections since the Committee’s last report to
the Parliament in May 2012.
Following on from the first interim report, which covered
the first half of the Committee’s site inspections, this second interim report
discusses the issues explored by the Committee during its inspections in
Victoria, South Australia, the Northern Territory and Queensland.
Throughout the site inspection program, the Committee has
been struck by the vast range of ecosystem types that exist in Australia,
including those in terrestrial, marine and freshwater environments. The
diversity of ecosystems has highlighted the different challenges facing natural
resource managers across the country.
At the same time, however, the site inspections have also
reinforced the fact that there are many challenges common to biodiversity
conservation across the country. The threats that climate change
poses—including changes in temperature, rainfall patterns, and sea levels—are
likely to have implications for the way biodiversity is managed in all
ecosystem types, albeit to varying extents and with different results. The
uncertainty associated with the impacts of climate changes is also a common
challenge for natural resource managers and policy makers across the country, perhaps
signalling the need for a new approach to natural resource management in an
unpredictable climate.
Finally, I would like to take this opportunity to place on
record my thanks to all of the local experts who met with and briefed the
Committee during the site inspection program, and to all those who facilitated
the Committee’s visits. I also appreciate the cooperation of my fellow
Committee members and acknowledge the significant commitments they and the
committee secretariat have made in engaging in this important site inspection
program.
Tony Zappia MP
Chair
Membership of the Committee
Chair
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Mr Tony Zappia MP
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Deputy
Chair
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Dr Mal Washer MP
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Members
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Ms Jill Hall MP
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Mr Wyatt Roy MP
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Mr Harry Jenkins MP
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Mr Kelvin Thomson MP
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Ms Nola Marino MP
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Committee Secretariat
Secretary
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Ms Julia Morris
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Inquiry
Secretary
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Ms Peggy Danaee
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Senior
Research Officers
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Ms Susan Dinon (from 28/5/12)
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Mr James Nelson (to
25/5/12)
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Administrative
Officers |
Mr Peter Pullen |
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Ms Jessica Hargreaves (from
9/8/12) |
Terms of reference
The Committee will inquire into and report on biodiversity
in a changing climate, in relation to nationally important ecosystems. The
inquiry will have particular regard to:
- terrestrial, marine
and freshwater biodiversity in Australia and its territories
- connectivity between
ecosystems and across landscapes that may contribute to biodiversity
conservation
- how climate change
impacts on biodiversity may flow on to affect human communities and the economy
- strategies to enhance
climate change adaptation, including promoting resilience in ecosystems and
human communities
- mechanisms to promote
the sustainable use of natural resources and ecosystem services in a changing
climate
- an assessment of
whether current governance arrangements are well placed to deal with the
challenges of conserving biodiversity in a changing climate
- mechanisms to enhance
community engagement.
The scope of the committee’s inquiry shall include some case
studies of ‘nationally important ecosystems’, as defined by submissions to the
inquiry.
List of abbreviations
AIMS
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Australian Institute of Marine
Science
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CAP
|
Community
Advisory Panel
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CCEA
|
Climate Change,
Environment and the Arts
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CLLMM
|
Coorong, Lower
Lakes and Murray Mouth
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CSIRO
|
Commonwealth
Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation
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DEH
|
Department for
Environment and Heritage (SA)
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DEWNR
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Department of
Environment, Water and Natural Resources (SA)
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DNA
|
Deoxyribonucleic
acid
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DRO
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Daintree Rainforest Observatory
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DSEWPAC
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Department of Sustainability,
Environment, Water, Population and Communities
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ENSO
|
El Niño–Southern Oscillation
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GBRMPA
|
Great Barrier Reef Marine Park
Authority
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IEP
|
Indigenous Employment Program
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JCU
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James Cook University
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KNP
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Kakadu National Park
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KNYA |
Kungun Ngarrindjeri Yunnan
Agreement (Agreement between the Ngarrindjeri people and the Government of
South Australia) |
KRAC |
Kakadu Research Advisory
Committee |
LED |
Light-emitting diode |
Lower Lakes |
Lakes Alexandrina and Albert |
NERP |
National Environmental Research
Program |
NRA |
Ngarrindjeri Regional Authority |
OZCAM |
Online
Zoological Collections of Australian Museums |
Ramsar |
The Convention on Wetlands
(Ramsar, Iran, 1971) |
REDMAP |
Range Extension Database and
Mapping Project |
Reef HQ |
Reef HQ Great Barrier Reef
Aquarium |
UNESCO |
United Nations Educational,
Scientific and Cultural Organization |
WTMA |
Wet Tropics Management Authority |
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