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31 October 2022 News Release

CSIRO, Australia's national science agency, has announced a new phase in its National Koala Monitoring program which is set to deliver a robust estimate of the national koala population. 

The new phase includes $10 million in funding over the next 4 years, which was announced by Minister for the Environment and Water Tanya Plibersek last month.  

The funding comes at a much-needed time for Australia’s koala population. In January 2022, the koala (combined populations of Queensland, New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory) was up listed to ‘Endangered’ under the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 (EPBC Act).  

The new phase of the National Koala Monitoring Program will deliver a robust estimate of the national koala population. This will result in a long-lasting capability to monitor and assess trends in koala populations across the entire species range. 

CSIRO researchers have spent the past year co-designing the national koala program with key research, agency, Indigenous and community partners.

“The koala is an iconic species for all Australians, and of enormous cultural and spiritual significance to First Nations people,” Co-project leader for the National Koala Monitoring program, CSIRO Senior Research Scientist Dr Andrew Hoskins said. 

“Partnerships are core to the National Koala Monitoring Program. As such, we recognise that the only way we can recover this iconic species is having everyone involved, the broadest community minds possible,” he said.

CSIRO will be working with university, agency, Indigenous and citizen science groups to build on existing on-ground efforts and use state of the art scientific surveying and modelling techniques.
 
Boots are already on the ground for the new phase of the program, which kicked off in the Northern Murray Darling catchment, Queensland earlier this month. This included CSIRO working with the Queensland Murray Darling Catchment Aboriginal Rangers (QMDCL), Millmerran Landcare and fellow community members to conduct survey work and workshop discussions.

The QMDCL Aboriginal rangers are working with CSIRO to develop cross-cultural monitoring methods to find and share information about koala population status and trends. This includes supporting QMDCL to collect koala data using structured survey techniques, such as on-ground transects and drone surveys.

 “There is much to learn about where koalas are in our region, how many there are, and if they are healthy. This collaboration is important for koala and country,” Senior Queensland Murray Darling Catchment Aboriginal Ranger William Taylor said. 

“We are co-designing a dashboard which allows koala data to be appropriately used and shared for Guda (koalas) and country.”

Koalas are easy to identify. But our ability to see (or detect) individual koalas is extremely low and varies in different habitats, and even between different people using different monitoring methods. 

The new National Koala Monitoring Program will collect koala sightings using consistent methods across the country and build survey know-how with citizen scientists. This will help achieve the rigorous, national snapshot of koala populations and koala distribution.
 
“Good science is key to good conservation. This new National Koala Monitoring Program will help us make better investments and better conservation decisions, so that we can protect the iconic koala for generations to come,” Threatened Species Commissioner, Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water,” Dr Fiona Fraser said.

For more information

Visit: Collaborative partnerships for the National Koala Monitoring Program - CSIRO

Video link: https://vimeo.com/763642406

Ecos link: Working with all Australians to win the game of koala hide and seek – ECOS (csiro.au)

B-roll- CSIRO in the field with rangers in the Northern Murray Darling catchment, Queensland

https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fo/qw71ae8riqltiiwa6jh4y/h?dl=0&rlkey=sqvemvdudavqfrzlpgknzljnd

File 23: Eric Vanderduys working in the field with drones.

File 98: CSIRO’s Dr Cathy Robinson with Ranger Sunny Draper from Queensland Murray Darling Catchment Aboriginal Rangers.

File 24: CSIRO using infrared and thermal imagery to find koalas.

File 70: CSIRO’s National Koala Monitoring Program team L to R: Andrew Hoskins, Cathy Robinson and Eric Vanderduys walking in the field.

Images

CSIRO scientists spot a sleepy koala in the field. Image by Mat Gilfedder.
Koalas are easy to identify but there are gaps in our knowledge about Koala populations. That's where a collaborative National Koala Monitoring Program comes in. (Image Cuatrok77 via Flickr)
The CSIRO National Koala Monitoring Program team L to R: Andrew Hoskins, Cathy Robinson and Eric Vanderduys working in the field.

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