Tasmanian Midlands socio-economic profile

The Landscapes and Policy Hub established under the Australian Government’s National Environmental Research Program (NERP), is one of five multi-institutional research hubs established to ‘provide robust science that is essential for managing the sustainability of Australia’s environment’ (DSEWPAC 2...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gadsby, S., Lockwood, M., Moore, S., Curtis, A.
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: University of Tasmania 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.nerplandscapes.edu.au/publication/tasmanian-midlands-socio-economic-profile
https://researchportal.murdoch.edu.au/esploro/outputs/report/Tasmanian-Midlands-socio-economic-profile/991005541988507891
https://researchportal.murdoch.edu.au/view/delivery/61MUN_INST/12135670210007891/13136969210007891
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Summary:The Landscapes and Policy Hub established under the Australian Government’s National Environmental Research Program (NERP), is one of five multi-institutional research hubs established to ‘provide robust science that is essential for managing the sustainability of Australia’s environment’ (DSEWPAC 2011). The hub comprises a team of researchers from the University of Tasmania, the Antarctic Climate & Ecosystems Cooperative Research Centre, Australian National University, Murdoch University, Griffith University and Charles Sturt University. The aim of the hub is to develop tools, techniques and policy options that enable biodiversity to be considered at landscape scale. The hub is focusing on two study areas: the Tasmanian Midlands and the Australian Alps. The Tasmanian Midlands is one of the oldest grazed regions in Australia, with a traditional wool growing region that dates back to the 1820s (Fulton 2000), and is predominately private land. Wool continues to be the largest enterprise in the region (Mooney et al. 2010), however production has diversified to include crops such as peas, cereal, potato and poppies. Expanded irrigation schemes will likely lead to an extension of irrigated agriculture across the region. The land use history of the region has resulted in a number of conservation issues including fragmentation of remnant vegetation, rural tree decline and degradation of native grassland (Mooney et al. 2010). This report contributes to the Landscapes and Policy Hub by providing a socio-economic profile for areas encompassing the Tasmanian Midlands. The hub’s Social and Institutional Futures Project is investigating the social and institutional elements of these landscapes, with a particular focus on the lowland native grasslands scattered through the region. Lowland native grasslands are the most depleted vegetation formation in Tasmania and are listed as critically endangered under the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 (Cwlth). Much of the native grassland cover has been ...