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Latest News

  1. They eat what?! Arid Recovery 11-May-2012
  2. Behaviours to watch for Arid Recovery 08-May-2012
  3. How can you get involved? Arid Recovery 02-May-2012
  4. Feral Cat Month Arid Recovery 01-May-2012
  5. Postie Bash Preparations Arid Recovery 27-Apr-2012

Arid Recovery News

How to become a scientist

Arid Recovery - Tuesday, January 24, 2012

The Arid Recovery Reserve is buzzing with the launch of a new bettong behavioural study- and you can be involved!  There is a scientist within us all and we would like to give all our volunteers, members, tourists and school children a chance to be involved in the science we undertake.

Anyone lucky enough to have been out to the reserve and had the chance to see our threatened Burrowing Bettong will know they are quite social creatures.  We at Arid Recovery want to find out more about the interactions between Burrowing Bettongs and what it all means and this is where you come in. 

As part of the project a number of individuals will be marked with coloured ear tags so that tourists and others visiting the reserve in the late evening will be able to identify individuals and how they interact with one another.  Burrowing Bettongs will also be radio collared, offering educational groups to the reserve the unique opportunity to radio track a real animal, finding out where they hide during the day and who they are living with.

“This project is going to provide everyone, particularly the local community, with a fantastic opportunity to be involved in science.  Hopefully it might get people asking a few more questions about the world around them and increase their involvement,” quotes Hannah Spronk, Volunteer and Community Coordinator.

The project has been kick started with some generous funding through the Optus Regional Community Grants.  “Thanks to the Optus Regional Community Grants we will be able to start this project off on the right foot,” agrees Hannah.

For more information on the Burrowing Bettong Behavioural Project or to find out how you can be involved contact the office on (08) 8671 8282 or email volunteer@aridrecovery.org.au

BHPB Matched Giving Support, where does it go?

Arid Recovery - Wednesday, March 31, 2010
BHP Billiton's Matched Giving Program contributes $10 per hour of volunteer work undertaken by BHPB employees towards the cause of their choice, and also dollar for dollar on many donations given by their employees.  The value of monies raised this quarter by Arid Recovery volunteers through the BHP Billiton's matched giving program is priceless.

This Autumn quarter will have a 'feral focus'.  Funds raised via the Program will help with maintenance of our existing remote monitoring system and feral eradication of the Red Lake Expansion.  March, April and May are the 'golden months' for feral predators as young cats and foxes begin to emerge. Hence it is a crucial time to maintain our feral control programs and monitoring to enhance our knowledge of these amazing but devastating feral predators.

Arid Recovery would like to give special thanks to all the volunteers who have given their time to assist our cause this past quarter, in particular those that assisted with annual trapping, and in this quarter we highlight those involved with feral animal control.

Arid Recovery Awarded NRM Community Grant

Arid Recovery - Tuesday, December 22, 2009
Minister for Environment and Conservation, the Hon. Jay Weatherill MP announced Arid Recovery among the successful applicants of this highly competitive grant.  The $50,000 received will enable Arid Recovery to improve monitoring of reintroduced species such as greater bilbies and burrowing bettongs, and improve the genetic management of species such as the western barred bandicoot.  Community training sessions in areas such as feral animal control and threatened species monitoring has also been funded, as well as disseminating a decade's worth of arid zone research to various stakeholders in the form of information packs.  Community involvement plays a crucial role in successfully restoring Australia's arid zone.