Practical Protection for Local Biodiversity: A Backyard Journey in Tackling Feral Cats

Feral cat populations urgently need to be controlled. The challenge is enormous, and requires ‘boots on the ground’, so we need the media, politicians, government, invasive species organisations, and conservation agencies to encourage and empower people to take individual responsibility in addressing the impacts of outdoor cats.

Moss Effect: Bryophytes in Victoria’s Ecosystems

Bryophytes are a group of plants that are familiar to most but are rarely called by their species name – even amongst many botanists. They represent some of the smallest plants in the world. Unfortunately, they are among the forgotten species in conservation planning and land management, as their ecosystem requirements and functions are given too little consideration, if any.

NextGen Nature: Moving from Nature Exploitative to Nature Positive

How can Victoria support the development of a market for biodiversity certificates that is based on integrity and trust and, in doing so, deliver nature positive outcomes? Supporting biodiversity scientists to provide independent opinions for biodiversity certificates is one way to help to build a market based on integrity and trust. 

Tiny Frogs and Tarantulas: An Unexpected Friendship

In certain ecosystems, frogs feast on spiders, while in others, spiders devour frogs. It’s unlikely to find the pair co-existing harmoniously without one attacking the other. Yet, located in a burrow somewhere in the Amazon rainforest, scientists have observed an unexpected friendship between the Dotted humming frog (Chiasmocleis ventrimaculata) and the burrowing tarantula (Xenesthis immanis).