CSIRO to
track over 1000 feral Water Buffalo in Northern
Australia
More than 1000 feral buffalo and unmanaged cattle
roaming Northern Australia will be tagged and tracked as
part of the world’s largest satellite herd-tracking
program, announced today by Australia’s national science
agency, CSIRO.
Coinciding with National
Reconciliation Week this week, the $4 million, 3.5 year
project aims to turn the destructive pests into
economic, environmental and cultural opportunities for
Indigenous communities across the region, as well as
create new 'best practice' for managing large herds
using space technology.
Satellite GPS-tracking tags will be
attached to the animals' ears and deliver real-time,
geographically-accurate insights into herd density,
accessibility, and transport costs.
The animals will be tracked across
a combined area of 22,314 square kilometres, taking in
the Arafura swamp catchment in Arnhem Land in the
Northern Territory, and Upper Normanby and Archer River
on Cape York Peninsula in Queensland.
CSIRO Chief Executive Dr Larry
Marshall said the program demonstrated the opportunities
for Australia in growing our own space capabilities and
supply chains while also advancing reconciliation.
"Australia's burgeoning space
industry is creating exciting new possibilities for
innovative science and technology to solve our greatest
challenges, like using satellites to manage our wide,
open land in more culturally and environmentally
sensitive ways," Dr Marshall said.
"This unique partnership is a
reminder that the new frontier of space is an
opportunity to learn from the mistakes of our past, and
work alongside Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
people to ensure that space-enabled technology is being
put to best use to improve the land we all share."
The collaborative program will see
CSIRO and Charles Darwin University develop the data
management tools; James Cook University create the
GPS-tracking ear tags; satellite company Kineis provide
access to their satellite fleet and technical expertise;
and the North Australian Indigenous Land and Sea
Management Alliance Ltd (NAILSMA) drive efforts on the
ground in partnership with Mimal Land Management
Aboriginal Corporation, Aak Puul Ngangtam Ltd, and
Normanby Land Management.
NAILSMA Chief Executive Ricky
Archer said the program would create opportunities for
economic development, landscape restoration and the
protection of cultural sites.
"Using the information the ear tags
generate, rangers and land managers can access more
precise decision-making tools about where they focus
efforts to reduce the impacts of buffalo and cattle
grazing and eroding native flora and fauna," Mr Archer
said.
"As our environment recovers, it
will be more resilient in the face of fires, invasive
plants and climate change, and we’ll be able to protect
sites of cultural significance to Indigenous
Australians."
"Over the course of the project,
we’ll also be developing best-practice ethical mustering
and handling guidelines so these animals can become part
of the ethically-sourced meat industry, creating more
jobs in our communities."
The project is being funded by
Department of Agriculture, Water and the Environment
under the National Landcare Program; Smart Farming
Partnerships initiative.

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