Wal Whalley and Rhiannon Smith, School of Environmental and Rural Science, The University of New England. Email: rwhalley@une.edu.au; rsmith66@une.edu.au
Members of ARS working in the general area of landscape regeneration may be interested in the outcomes from the above Conference at the University of New England last February. The Australian Rangeland Society was one of the sponsors of the Conference and 12 of the 27 Plenary and Keynote addresses were published in the latest Issue of The Rangeland Journal, totaling 166 pages plus an Editorial. This issue was published on the 29th January, 2018 as the last in Vol. 39. By arrangement with CSIRO Publishing, all papers in this Issue can be downloaded free to non-members of ARS for three months from the date of publication. They can be downloaded free to Members after this date. Additional plenary and keynote addresses will also be published this year in a special issue of Ecological Management and Restoration (https://www.ecolsoc.org.au/publications/journals/emr).
More than 360 delegates attended and the Conference featured 190 presentations, including 27 presentations by invited plenary and keynote speakers, covering the full spectrum of topics associated with environmental restoration. Delegates included scientists, practitioners, landholders, Indigenous land management groups, and government and non-government organisations. The program covered social and political facets associated with restoration; practical aspects of designing and executing restoration projects; sustainable design of restoration projects in the face of continuing landscape and climate change, and end points and goals for restoration projects. Symposia topics included:
The role of the arts in communicating environmental messages was explored through thought-provoking performances, artworks and a public discussion forum, and delegates visited local restoration projects and practitioners during a ¾-day field trip.
We invite readers to seek out audio recordings of presentations by visiting (http://www.une.edu.au/about-une/academic-schools/school-of-environmental-and-rural-science/ers-news-and-events/restore-regenerate-revegetate-conference-2017).
During the final plenary session of the Conference, approximately 120 delegates formulated and agreed unanimously to the following Declaration as part of the conference legacy. This document has since been distributed to political leaders throughout Australia in the hope that some of these recommendations will be accepted and appropriate actions taken.
The delegates at the Restore, Regenerate, Revegetate Conference held at the University of New England, Armidale, New South Wales, from 5–9 February 2017, shared an impressive body of practical and scientific knowledge of how we are restoring Australia’s natural heritage and environmental capital across the continent. However, the Conference also highlighted several key points that must be addressed if we are to truly meet the challenges and opportunities of land repair.
We would be interested to hear from any ARS members in Administrative positions about their reactions to these recommendations and any impacts they might have on attitude changes in the future.