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Second National Forum – April/May 2009 FIRST NOTICE Minding our own biodiversity: conservation on private land Are you interested in conserving native flora and fauna on your land? Do you have a management agreement or covenant over some of your land? Do you participate in conservation activities on local public land? Are you part of a network linking conservation across the landscape? Do you receive any support or are incentives available to assist your efforts? Our second national forum will focus on conservation outside the formal reserve system, whether on small blocks or large landscape level efforts or cross-tenure projects. It will highlight the people and places involved and investigate the incentives and support available. This is your opportunity to participate, learn, contribute, debate and move this essential component of biodiversity conservation forward. The forum will include presentations, case studies, facilitated discussion sessions and field visits to project sites. Registration fee (includes morning & afternoon tea, lunch, field costs & GST) There will be a forum dinner with a guest speaker (details and cost to be advised) Registration forms and programs will be posted on the website during January 2009. 7th National Conference - April 2008 Our declining flora - tackling the threats The 7th ANPC National Conference was co-hosted by Mount Annan Botanic Garden and focused on the threatening processes responsible for declines in our native flora. Various threatening processes were examined, including issues of global significance such as climate change, as well as more locally urgent issues such as weeds and habitat loss. Documents
Keynote speakers and abstracts
The ANPC has traditionally held a National Conference every second year. In 2007 we introduced a more specialised National Forum, to be held in each intervening year. First National Forum - April 2007 What lies beneath? The role of soil biota in the health and rehabilitation of native vegetation Forum Theme This national three-day forum provided an opportunity for sharing the latest research on the key roles of soil organisms in ecosystem function and native vegetation rehabilitation. The primary focus was on the hidden and often-overlooked flora: mosses, liverworts, algae, fungi and lichens. These organisms are important in ecosystem functioning (for example through formation of biotic soil crusts and as mycorrhizal partners of plants). Practitioners demonstrated identification techniques and applications to rehabilitation practice, shared knowledge and skills gained from experience, and identified areas of research needed to fill knowledge gaps. The forum theme was a response to a demand for scientific and practical guidance on this often overlooked but fundamental aspect of natural resource management. The forum included:
Documents Previous National ConferencesThe ANPC’s national conferences provide a major forum for conservation practitioners, community members and the scientific community to interact at a practical level. ANPC conferences and forums provide:
Conference sessions usually focus on a theme selected for that year, while the workshops offer a diverse choice of techniques and guidelines. ANPC members receive discounts on the registration fees.The 6th National Conference, on the theme Plant Conservation - the Challenges of Change, was held in Adelaide, SA from 26 September to 4 October, 2005. Report. Program. Workshops. The 5th National Conference, Recovery: A Decade Towards a Biodiverse Future, was held in Geelong from 24 February to 1 March 2003. Report. Program. Recommendations. The 4th National Conference, Promotion Practice and Partnerships, was held in Albury Wodonga in late November 1999. Report. Program. Outcomes. The 3rd National Conference, Sharing the Vision, was held in 1997. Outcomes. The 2nd National Conference was held in Perth on 27 September 1995, in conjunction with the 4th International Botanic Gardens Conservation Congress. Report. Resolutions. The 1st National Conference, Cultivating Conservation, was held at the University of Tasmania from 6 to 9 December 1993. Media release. |
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