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Transcript
2013 international
biodivercities
conference
CONFERENCE PROGRAM
9 – 11 September 2013
Joondalup Resort
Perth, Western Australia
2013 International BiodiverCities Conference
Mayor Welcome
The City of Joondalup is pleased to be hosting the 2013 International BiodiverCities Conference, in
association with the ICLEI Local Governments for Sustainability and the Western Australian Local
Government Association.
We are proud to welcome visitors to the internationally renowned and award winning Joondalup Resort,
to address the important issues of biodiversity conservation in a changing climate.
Joondalup is located within the South West Australia Biodiversity Hotspot. This region is one of 34
internationally recognised areas that contain a rich variety of biodiversity due to the wide range of
habitats which are located in this compact geographical area. It has also been identified as being
particularly vulnerable to the impacts of climate change.
The City has a long history of working with partners both regionally and internationally to implement
programs and projects that aim to conserve biodiversity. Whilst environmental management is a key
role of the City it also recognises that a whole of community approach is required in order to achieve
significant change. The City works closely with 17 Friends Groups who work within the City’s natural
areas to conserve and enhance the biodiversity of the local natural environment.
Troy Pickard
Mayor
City of Joondalup
This conference aims to provide attendees with information relating to the latest research on impacts of climate change on
biodiversity and national and global case studies of best practice in climate adaptation. I hope that you find the topics presented
both interesting and inspiring.
Thanks to the Sponsors of the 2013 International BiodiverCities Conference for their tremendous support – Principal Sponsor
Landcorp, Major Sponsors Edith Cowan University, Natural Area Consulting and Eco Logical, and Supporting Sponsors Carbon
Neutral and Tamala Park Regional Council.
We hope you enjoy all that Joondalup has to offer whilst you participate in the 2013 International BiodiverCities Conference.
Troy Pickard
Mayor
City of Joondalup
2
Conference Program
CEO Welcome
It is my pleasure to extend a warm welcome to the City of Joondalup and the 2013 International
BiodiverCities Conference.
The City of Joondalup joined the ICLEI Local Action for Biodiversity (LAB) Program, now known as the
BiodiverCities Program, in October 2006 as one of 21 pioneering cities. Through participation in this
international program, the City has developed a comprehensive Biodiversity Report and Biodiversity Action
Plan, as well as a number of “on the ground” biodiversity related projects that have assisted the City to
integrate biodiversity conservation into decision making processes and day to day operations.
The City’s current focus is identifying the links between biodiversity management and climate change
and developing mechanisms to ensure the long term protection of the City’s local environment.
Within the City there are more than 300 diverse natural areas and public open spaces, which
support a range of unique plants and animals and provide our community with numerous passive
recreational opportunities.
Garry Hunt
Chief Executive Officer
City of Joondalup
The City implements many programs, strategies and policies, in partnership with stakeholders and the
community, to ensure the conservation of the City’s biodiversity values. The protection and enhancement of biodiversity within
cities provides numerous benefits to the community through the provision of ecological services such as the capture of carbon
dioxide, cooling of urban environments and a number of recreational and cultural experiences.
This focus on biodiversity management contributes to the outstanding lifestyle opportunities available in our community. The
local environment is one of the reasons why Joondalup is recognised internationally for its liveability.
This conference provides an opportunity for stakeholders involved in the planning and delivery of projects for the protection of
local biodiversity within urban environments to come together and promote the importance of biodiversity, and discuss how
challenges associated with the impacts of climate change can be addressed.
During the course of the conference you will be provided with information relating to the latest research on the impacts of climate
change on biodiversity and how biodiversity can mitigate the effects of climate change. This will include local, national and global
case studies of best practice in climate adaptation. I would particularly like to thank our conference speakers for sharing your
knowledge and experiences with the conference delegates.
We look forward to welcoming you all to the City of Joondalup and trust that you will enjoy your stay at the superb
Joondalup Resort.
Garry Hunt PSM
Chief Executive Officer
City of Joondalup
Turning our emissions into trees
The carbon footprint of the 2013 International BiodiverCities Conference is being
calculated and offset by Carbon Neutral. Emissions related to the conference,
including travel, energy, food, waste and paper will be offset with the planting of
biodiverse native trees that will help rehabilitate rural Australia, lock in carbon and
provide habitat for animals, plants and birds.
Carbon Neutral is a carbon solutions provider and reforestation developer. They
help organisations and individuals across Australia minimise their impact on the
environment by working with them to measure, reduce
and offset carbon emissions.
Find out more at carbonneutral.com.au
3
2013 International BiodiverCities Conference
Conference Program – Arrival and Day One
ARRIVAL Sunday 8 September 2013
5.30pm
Welcome Reception
View 180 Cocktail Lounge
Drinks and Canapés
Presented by Natural Area Consulting
5.45pm
Welcome Address
Mr Garry Hunt
Chief Executive Officer, City of Joondalup
7.30pm
Function ends
DAY 1 Monday 9 September 2013
8.00am
Registration open
Tea and coffee on arrival
8.30am
Lakeview Terrace
Official Conference Opening
Mr Jamie Parry
Director Governance and Strategy, City of Joondalup
CEO Introduction
Mr Garry Hunt
Chief Executive Officer, City of Joondalup
Acknowledgement of Country
Professor Colleen Hayward
Edith Cowan University
Presented by Edith Cowan University
Mayor Welcome
Mayor Troy Pickard
City of Joondalup
Ms Shela Patrickson
ICLEI Cities Biodiversity Centre
9.00am
Lakeview Terrace
Opening Plenary:
Global Biodiversity Impacts and Climate Adaptation – A Global Perspective
Chaired by Mr Jamie Parry, City of Joondalup
Keynote Speaker 1
Professor Tim Flannery
Scientist, explorer and conservationist
The Weather Makers: How Man is Changing the Climate and What it Means for Life On Earth
Keynote Speaker 2
Mr André Mader
Program Officer, Convention of Biological Diversity Secretariat
Cities, Climate Change, Biodiversity and the UN
Keynote Speaker 3
Dr Michael Dunlop
Land Water Biodiversity Climate Analyst, CSIRO, Australia
Climate-ready Biodiversity Conservation
Panel Question time
4
Conference Program
10.55am
The Gallery
Coffee Break
11.15am
Lakeview Terrace
Plenary Session 2
Valuing Ecosystem Services to Support Climate Action
Keynote Speaker 4
Dr Paul Hardisty
Director of the National Climate, Adaptation Flagship, CSIRO, Australia
Valuing Urban Ecosystems in a Changing Climate
Keynote Speaker 5
Professor Haripriya Gundimeda
Indian Institute of Technology, Mumbai, India
Ecosystem Service Valuation for Climate Change Mitigation and Adaptation
Keynote Speaker 6
Dr Åsa Gren
Researcher, Stockholm Resilience Centre, Sweden
Global Urbanization, Biodiversity, and Ecosystems – Challenges and Opportunities
Panel Question time
1.00pm
The Gallery
Networking Lunch
Presented by Edith Cowan University
1.45pm
Parallel Session 1
Choose one of four sessions
Session 1
Tuart Room 1
Conservation in Action – Global Case Studies
Biodiverse Mega Cities – a design brief
Mr Jason Alexandra
Charles Darwin University
Session 2
Tuart Room 2
Partnerships to Enhance Biodiversity
Partnerships to enhance biodiversity – What we do and who we do it with
Ms Victoria Maguire
Perth Region NRM
Ms Toni Burbidge
Shire of Mundaring
Session 3
Dunes Room
Integration of Biodiversity into Urban Landscape
Redesigning our cities as ecosystem service centres in a challenging climate: The City
of Melbourne experience
Ms Yvonne Lynch
City of Melbourne
Session 4
Quarry Room
Community Education and Public Participation Fostering Biodiversity Conservation
Practical tools to evaluate Biodiversity Communication Education and Public Awareness (CEPA)
Projects and Programs
Ms Lindie Buirski
City of Cape Town
5
2013 International BiodiverCities Conference
Conference Program – Day One
2.20pm
Lakeview Terrace
Plenary Session 3
Biodiversity Conservation in Action – Global City Case Studies
Key Note Speaker 7
Professor Bruce Clarkson
Director of Environmental Research Institute, University of Waikato, New Zealand
Bringing Indigenous Biodiversity Back into Hamilton and Other New Zealand Cities
Key Note Speaker 8
Dr Debra Roberts
Director of Climate Change, eThekwini Municipality, Durban, South Africa
Using Biodiversity to Build a Climate Smart City: The Story of Durban, South Africa
Panel Question time
Day 1 Wrap Up
Mr Jamie Parry
Director Governance and Strategy, City of Joondalup
Program concludes
3.40pm
The Gallery
Afternoon Tea
DAY 1 Evening Activities
4.20pm
Transport to Yellagonga Regional Park
Neil Hawkins Park, Joondalup
4.40pm
CEO Welcome
Mr Garry Hunt
Chief Executive Officer, City of Joondalup
4.50pm
Guided Nyungar Bushtucker Tour
Yellagonga Nature Reserve
5.50pm
Gourmet BBQ Dinner
6.40pm
Guided Night Stalk Tour
Presented by Eco Logical
8.00pm
Transport back to Joondalup Resort
¢
¢
¢
¢
¢
¢
Conservation in Action – Global Case Studies
Partnerships to Enhance Biodiversity
Integration of Biodiversity into Urban Landscape
Community Education and Public Participation Fostering Biodiversity Conservation
Assessing and Managing Coastal Vulnerability
Biodiversity for Carbon Sequestration
Note: All events will take place at the Joondalup Resort unless otherwise indicated. Program is subject to change.
6
Conference Program
7
2013 International BiodiverCities Conference
Conference Program – Day Two
DAY 2 Tuesday 10 September 2013
8.00am
Registration open
Tea and coffee on arrival
9.00am
Lakeview Terrace
Welcome and introductions
Mr Jamie Parry
Director Governance and Strategy, City of Joondalup
Plenary Session 4
Greening Cities and Carbon Bio-Sequestration
Keynote Speaker 9
Ms Anissa Lawrence
Director, TierraMar Consulting, Australia
Blue Carbon: Reducing the Impacts of Climate Change by Conserving Coastal Ecosystems
Keynote Speaker 10
Professor Lei Yang
Centre for Water Resources Studies, National Sun Yat-sen University, Kaohsiung, Taiwan
The Concept of “Blue Carbon” Applied in Carbon Sequestration by the Coastal Wetland Parks in
Kaohsiung City, Taiwan
Keynote Speaker 11
Mr Craig Anderson
Chief Executive Officer, Greening Australia (WA)
Restoring Biodiversity through Corporate and Community Partnerships
10.45am
The Gallery
Coffee Break
11.05am
Parallel Session 2
Choose one of four sessions
Session 5
Tuart Room 1
Biodiversity for Carbon Sequestration
Enhancing local biodiversity through reforestation carbon sinks
Mr Ray Wilson
Carbon Neutral, WA
Session 6
Tuart Room 2
Partnerships to Enhance Biodiversity
ICLEI’s Local Action for Biodiversity – Australia (LAB – Australia): strengthening local
and national connections
Ms Shela Patrickson, ICLEI Cities Biodiversity Centre
Mr Martin Brennan, ICLEI Oceania
Session 7
Dunes Room
Integration of Biodiversity into Urban Landscape
Tools supporting local biodiversity conservation in the South West of Western Australia
Ms Renata Zelinova
WA Local Government Association
Session 8
Quarry Room
Assessing and Managing Coastal Vulnerability
Opportunities to enhance biodiversity in coastal adaptation to climate change
Professor Laura Stocker
Curtin University, Coastal Collaboration Cluster
8
Conference Program
11.40am
Parallel Session 3
Choose one of four sessions
Session 9
Tuart Room 1
Integration of Biodiversity into Urban Landscape
Increasing biodiversity habitat using urban green infrastructure
Dr Caragh Threlfall
University of Melbourne
Session 10
Tuart Room 2
Community Education and Participation Fostering Biodiversity Conservation
Conserving urban wetlands through community involvement
Mrs Lara O’Neill
City of Joondalup
Session 11
Dunes Room
Conservation in Action – Global Case Studies
City of Gold Coast: balancing conservation outcomes
Mr Huxley Lawler
City of Gold Coast
Session 12
Quarry Room
Conservation in Action – Global Case Studies
Management of biodiversity in Helsingborg, Sweden: key factors for mainstreaming
Mr Widar Narvelo
Helsingborg City
12.15pm
Parallel Session 4
Choose one of four sessions
Session 13
Tuart Room 1
Integration of Biodiversity into Urban Landscape
City of Salisbury biodiversity corridors
Ms Tamika Cook
City of Salisbury
Session 14
Tuart Room 2
Conservation in Action – Global Case Studies
Integrating the Built Environment with the Natural
Ms Sharon Clark
Landcorp
Session 15
Dunes Room
Community Education and Participation Fostering Biodiversity Conservation
Collaboration and integration in Edmonton, Canada: Biodiversity planning and communication,
education and public awareness (CEPA)
Mr Grant Pearsell
City of Edmonton
Session 16
Quarry Room
Integration of Biodiversity into Urban Landscape
Integration of biodiversity into the urban landscape in Mexico City
Dr José Bernal Stoopen
Mexico City
12.45pm
The Gallery
Networking Lunch
Presented by Edith Cowan University
9
2013 International BiodiverCities Conference
Conference Program – Day Two
1.30pm
Lakeview Terrace
Plenary Session 5
Biodiversity Conservation for Climate Mitigation
Key Note Speaker 12
Dr Berthold Seibert
Project Director, ASEAN Centre for Biodiversity
Global partnerships in biodiversity conservation from a regional perspective. The ASEAN Centre for
Biodiversity (ACB) reflections on three years with the Biodiversity and Climate Change Project
Key Note Speaker 13
Professor Stephen Hopper
Winthrop Professor of Biodiversity, The University of Western Australia
Plant Diversity, Granite Outcrops, Cities, and Climate Mitigation – Global Research and Prospects
Panel Question time
2.45pm
Conference conclusion and wrap up
Mayor Troy Pickard
City of Joondalup
Program concludes
3.00pm
The Gallery
Afternoon Tea
DAY 2 Evening Activities
4.20pm
Transport to Kings Park
5.30pm
Pre–dinner drinks
Fraser’s Reception Centre
5.40pm
CEO Introduction
Mr Garry Hunt
Chief Executive Officer, City of Joondalup
Mayor Welcome
Mayor Troy Pickard
City of Joondalup
Host Sponsor
Mr Stuart Nahajski, Landcorp
6.30pm
Conference Dinner
Fraser’s Reception Centre
Presented by Landcorp
8.00pm
Guest speaker Professor Kingsley Dixon
9.30pm
Transport back to Joondalup Resort
10
Conference Program
Conference Program – Day Three
DAY 3 Wednesday 11 September 2013
Optional Field Trip
8.00am
Field trip departs Joondalup Resort
8.30am
Hepburn Heights Conservation Area Guided Walk
10.00am
Sunset Coast Guided Walk and Naturalist Discovery Centre Tour
12.00noon – 12.45pm
Lunch
Marmion Angling and Aquatic Club
1.30pm
Kings Park Guided Nature Walk and Free Time
4.00pm
Whiteman Park – Presentation and Dinner
6.00pm
Whiteman Park – Guided Nocturnal Tour
7.45pm
Depart for Joondalup Resort
8.15pm
Arrive back at Joondalup Resort
Program is subject to change.
Note: All events will take place at the Joondalup Resort unless otherwise indicated. Program is subject to change.
11
2013 International BiodiverCities Conference
General Conference Information
Registration Desk
Wi-Fi
Delegates who have purchased any type of registration/ticket
will need to register at the City of Joondalup Registration Desk
on arrival at the venue to collect their lanyard. Name lanyards
and conference proceedings can be collected from the
registration desk at 8.00am each day of the conference.
Complimentary wireless internet will be available to all
delegates at the conference.
Name Lanyards
Delegates will be required to wear name lanyards at all times
during the conference. This will allow access to all plenary
and your chosen parallel sessions as well as the welcome
reception, conference dinner and field trips.
Meal and Coffee Breaks
Username: Conference
Password: C0nference1 (zero instead of letter O)
Social Media
Delegates and interested members of the public can
interact, communicate and engage with the City of
Joondalup throughout the 2013 International BiodiverCities
Conference by ‘liking’ the City on Facebook and
‘following’ the City on Twitter using the #BiodiverCities
and #GlobalCity hashtags.
Morning tea, lunch and afternoon tea will be served in
The Gallery at the Joondalup Resort.
Turn emissions
into trees
At Carbon Neutral we help businesses and
individuals measure, reduce and offset
greenhouse gas emissions by planting
native Australian trees.
To find out more call 1300 851 211
carbonneutral.com.au
12
Conference Program
Social Highlights
Sunday 8 September
Tuesday 10 September
Welcome Reception
5.30pm
View 180 Cocktail Lounge
Joondalup Resort
Presented by Natural Area Consulting
Networking Lunch and Sponsor Exhibition Area
1.00pm
The Gallery
Joondalup Resort
Presented by Edith Cowan University
Monday 9 September
Conference Dinner
5.30pm
Fraser’s Reception Centre
Kings Park
Transport departs 4.20pm
Presented by Landcorp
Networking Lunch and Sponsor Exhibition Area
1.00pm
The Gallery
Joondalup Resort
Presented by Edith Cowan University
Guided Walks and BBQ Dinner
4.50pm
Neil Hawkins Park
Yellagonga Regional Park
Transport departs 4.20pm
Presented by Eco Logical Australia
Field Trip
Transport departs 8.00am
Hepburn Heights Bushland Guided Walk
Sunset Coast Guided Walk
Naturalist Discovery Centre Tour
Kings Park Guided Nature Walk and Free Time
Whiteman Park Guided Nocturnal Tour
•
Natural resource management
•
Biodiversity & environmental offsets
•
Wednesday 11 September
planning, assessment & mapping
•
Ecological survey & monitoring
•
Environmental assessments & approvals
•
GIS & remote sensing
•
Bush regeneration
•
Aboriginal cultural heritage
At Eco Logical Australia we provide business, government and the community with tailored
and innovative solutions for land and environmental management issues by combining sound
1300 646 131 | www.ecoaus.com.au
13
Car Park
Bistro 38
14
Bistro Entry Lounge
Bistro Bar
Information
Desk
Bistro 38 Verandah
Stairs
Pool
Lift
The Gallery
Registration
Desk
The
Quarry
Room
Tuart
Room 1
Poolside
Level 1
The
Dunes
Room
Sponsor
Exhibition
Area
Tuart
Room 2
Lakeview
Terrace
Stage
2013 International BiodiverCities Conference
Joondalup Resort – Conference Locations
To Hotel
Accommodation
Kitchen
Kangaroo Arms
Kangaroo Arms
Courtyard
Entrance
Lobby
Reception
Stairs
View 180
Cocktail Lounge
Lift
Banksia
Room
Bus Pickup
Point
Board
Room
(Media/
Speaker
Room)
Resort
Corporate
Offices
Resort
Corporate
Offices
Lobby
Level 2
Hotel
Reception
Jacaranda Room
(Organising
Committee Room)
Conference Program
15
2013 International BiodiverCities Conference
Plenary Speakers – Day One
Professor Tim Flannery
Scientist, Explorer and Conservationist
Professor Tim Flannery was
awarded the 2007 Australian of
the Year Award for his outstanding
contribution to research on climate
change and the environment. Tim
Flannery has made contributions of
international significance to the fields
of palaeontology, mammalogy and conservation and to the
understanding of science in the broader community. His work,
which includes a number of major discoveries, has received
international acclaim from both peers and professionals.
Tim Flannery is on a mission. He believes that human activity
is drastically altering the earth’s climate, and that before too
long these changes will have a devastating effect on life on
this planet. He wants to mobilise the social and political will to
address this problem before it’s too late.
Tim Flannery is the former director of the South Australian
Museum, and is currently a Professor at Sydney’s Macquarie
University. He spent a year as Professor of Australian Studies
at Harvard, where he taught in the Department of Organismic
and Evolutionary Biology. In 2002, he became the first
environmentalist to deliver The Australia Day address to the
nation. In 2005 he was honoured as Australian Humanist of
the Year and, in 2007, he was named Australian of the Year.
Drawing on the ideas from his ground breaking new book, Tim
Flannery presents a straightforward and powerful exploration
of the connection between climate change, global warming,
and human activity. He has a gift for making complex science
understandable for a lay audience, through a deft use of
imagery, analogy and common sense. But Flannery does
not just tell his audience what is happening to our planet. He
very clearly lays out a game plan for halting current warming
trends and beginning the long, but entirely achievable project
of reversing the damage we have done. His goal is to mobilise
his listeners - both personally and politically - to recognise
that we are all “weather makers” and that the only choice,
both logically and ethically, is to begin to address this problem
before it’s too late.
Mr André Mader
Conservation Biologist and Specialist in Subnational Implementation of the CBD
André has worked in South Africa,
the Middle East and Canada as
researcher, manager, trainer and
advocacy expert – the objectives of his
work always aligned with those of the
16
United Nations’ Convention on Biological Diversity* (CBD).
Since 2006 André has focused on the interface between
biodiversity policy and practice and is currently seconded by
the international network of local governments, ICLEI, to the
Secretariat of the CBD in Montreal.
Conference Program
Dr Michael Dunlop
Land Water Biodiversity Climate Analyst, CSIRO
Dr Michael Dunlop focuses on
helping biodiversity managers and
policymakers, at national through to
local levels, gain knowledge so they
can make robust decisions about the
conservation of Australia’s biodiversity
in a changing climate.
This work involves understanding how climate change
will affect species, ecosystems and landscapes; exploring
the implications of these changes for conservation; and
developing strategies that can be implemented over time to
deal with the magnitude of the changes that are anticipated
and address risks and uncertainties. He is currently
investigating different processes for reassessing conservation
objectives in light of climate change. This involves exploring the
multitude of ways different aspects of biodiversity are valued by
society and how these might be affected by climate change.
Michael’s work on adapting biodiversity management
continues an exciting multidisciplinary program of integrated
analysis of long-term natural resource issues including the
sustainability of biofuels, long-term agricultural futures, and
water’s contribution to well-being.
Before joining CSIRO Michael worked on threatened
species, with the New Zealand Department of Conservation,
researched invertebrate biodiversity patterns in Antarctica,
and taught biostatistics. He has an honours degree in applied
physics and a Doctorate in evolutionary ecology/fire ecology.
Dr Paul Hardisty
Director of the National Climate Adaptation Flagship, CSIRO
Dr Paul Hardisty has recently joined
CSIRO as Director of the National
Climate Adaptation Flagship, and
previously was Global Director of
Sustainability and EcoNomics for
Worley Parsons, one of the world’s
largest engineering and project
delivery companies. Paul is a Chartered Professional Engineer,
and has over 25 years of experience advising industry and
government in sustainability and environmental strategy, and
the environmental and social economics of climate change,
water resources, and waste management.
He is a Visiting Professor in Environmental Engineering at
Imperial College of Science and Technology, London, UK,
and an Adjunct Professor at the University of Western
Australia School of Business, where he teaches sustainability
to MBA students.
Paul is a Director of Green Cross Australia, and the author
of several peer reviewed publications on sustainability and
climate change issues. His latest book, Environmental and
Economic Sustainability is a guide to estimating the dollar
value of environmental assets and the ecosystems services
they provide, allowing decision-makers to integrate these
issues fully into options assessment.
Professor Haripriya Gundimeda
Associate Professor, Indian Institute of Technology Bombay, India
Professor Haripriya Gundimeda holds
a Master’s Degree in Mathematics
and a PhD in Development Policy
and works on various issues relating
to environment and development
economics. She is currently working
as an Associate Professor in the
Department of Humanities and Social Sciences at the Indian
Institute of Technology Bombay, India. Professor Gundimeda
has also been a Visiting Scholar at the Institute of Behaviour
Sciences, at the University of Colorado, Boulder, as well as a
Ratan Tata Fellow at the Asia Research Centre, at the London
School of Economics, and a Political Sciences and Visiting
Researcher at the University of Gothenburg, Sweden.
She has been a joint coordinator of the international project
“The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity”, hosted by
UNEP. She has been the conference chair of URBIO 2012
and is a member of the expert committee constituted by the
Prime Minister of India on preparing a road map for Green
National Accounts.
17
2013 International BiodiverCities Conference
Plenary Speakers – Day One
Dr Åsa Gren
Researcher, Stockholm Resilience Center, Stockholm University
Beijer Institute of Ecological Economics, Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
Dr Åsa Gren holds a PhD in natural
resources management and she is
currently employed as a researcher
at the Royal Swedish Academy of
Sciences, the Beijer Institute and at
the Stockholm Resilience Center,
Stockholm University, Stockholm, Sweden. In her research
she focuses mainly on sustainability through the quantification
and valuation of ecosystem services and the essential role of
biodiversity for building resilience.
Her dissertation entailed quantifying ecosystem services at
different scales in the Baltic Sea drainage basin. Together
with colleagues in the field of economics, Dr Gren has
been involved in assessing the challenges of designing a
standardised model for building a wealth-based accounting
system for ecosystems, within the framework of the IWAP
project (Inclusive Wealth and Accounting Prices).
Current research is focused on assessing the role of
ecosystem services in a sustainable urban landscape
context. This research entails evaluating the effects of urban
development on ecosystem service generation, landscape
resilience and biodiversity, using e.g. functional and response
diversity in pollinator groups as indicators for biodiversity. A
major lens for this research is food security and change in
major drivers such as climate change and change in global
food market prices.
Dr Gren is also, together with architects at the Royal School of
Technology in Stockholm, involved in assessing the scientific
basis behind suggested urban sustainability approaches such
as “smart growth”.
She is one of two lead authors to one of the core chapters of
the UN initiated international assessment of the links between
sustainable cities, ecosystem services and biodiversity (CBO).
Dr Gren was invited keynote speaker at “The Sustainability
Day” 2010, organised by NMC, with over 800 participants
from the Swedish environmental business world to talk
about ecosystem services, biodiversity and sustainable
development.
She is one of the lead authors of one of three publications
used as background material at the Nobel Laureat
Symposium held at the Royal Swedish Academy in May
2011, where over 50 of the world’s greatest minds and Nobel
prize winners were gathered to discuss necessary future
transformation of the planet in an era of change.
Dr Gren was invited to write the introductory chapter for a
special issue in the scientific journal Ecological Economics on
the subject “Sustainable Future Cities”.
Dr Gren, in June of 2012, was invited to discuss the
potential of valuation of ecosystem services as a tool for
future sustainable development of the Swedish economy
with the Prime Minister of Sweden, Fredrik Reinfeldt and his
Commission for the Future.
Professor Bruce Clarkson
Director of the Environmental Research Institute, University of Waikato
Professor Bruce Clarkson is Director
of the Environmental Research
Institute at the University of Waikato
in Hamilton, New Zealand. He is
recognised as one of New Zealand’s
foremost authorities on ecological
restoration. His research has had
a direct impact on the success of numerous ecological
restoration projects particularly in urban environments such
as Hamilton gully restoration initiatives and the Waiwhakareke
Natural Heritage Park project in Hamilton City.
In 2005, together with independent consultant Dr Wren
Green he carried out a review of progress in the New Zealand
Biodiversity Strategy for the chief executives of the sponsoring
18
government agencies; in 2006 he was awarded the Loder
Cup, New Zealand’s premier conservation award.
Professor Clarkson led a New Zealand government funded
research program on determining the best methods for
restoring indigenous biodiversity in cities for seven years
(2005-2012) and is a member of the international expert panel
developing the City Biodiversity Index to measure countries’
progress in relation to the UNEP Convention on Biological
Diversity to which New Zealand is a signatory. He is also a
member of the National Center for Ecological Analysis and
Synthesis comparative ecology of cities project.
Conference Program
Dr Debra Roberts
Director of Climate Change, eThekwini Municipality, Durban, South Africa
Prior to joining the Municipality in January 1994, Dr Roberts
lectured at the (then) University of Natal for a period of ten
years in the departments of Biology and Geographical and
Environmental Sciences. Dr Roberts has written widely in
the fields of urban open space planning, environmental
management and urban climate protection and has received a
number of awards for her work.
CONSERVING A
BEAUTIFUL FUTURE.
The Tamala Park Regional Council is undertaking the
development of the Catalina Estate in Mindarie and
Clarkson in a responsible and sustainable manner.
Significant areas of native bushland have been
retained and flora and fauna relocation programs
established to save local plant and wildlife species.
A waste recycling program has also been developed to
significantly reduce the amount of construction waste
material sent to landfill and the TPRC is providing
incentives to reduce demand on domestic water and
power supplies.
MF TPRC000081
Dr Debra Roberts established and
heads the Environmental Planning
and Climate Protection Department of
eThekwini Municipality, Durban, South
Africa. Her key responsibilities in this
post include overseeing the planning
and protection of the city’s biodiversity
and natural resource base, directing and developing the
municipality’s Climate Protection Program and ensuring that
biodiversity and climate change considerations influence all
aspects of planning and development in the city.
19
2013 International BiodiverCities Conference
Plenary Speakers – Day Two
Ms Anissa Lawrence
Director, TierraMar Consulting
Anissa is Director and Founder of
TierraMar Consulting. With a diverse
background in environmental science,
coastal and marine natural resource
management (NRM) and conservation,
environmental communication, finance
and risk management, Anissa has over
20 years experience in developing and communicating strategic
solutions and managing people, projects and businesses
towards sustainability. She held senior positions in a number of
leading international environmental consulting and professional
services firms, as well as in the not for profit conservation
sector. Anissa’s current focus is on building the capacity of
NRM and conservation program delivery agents to achieve
better outcomes across Asia Pacific.
This work has included strategic assistance to develop
conservation and NRM frameworks, as well as program
development, implementation, evaluation and review of on
ground conservation and NRM projects. She is currently
assisting a number of organisations to develop and deliver
Blue Carbon programs across Asia Pacific and Australia.
Professor Lei Yang
National Sun Yat-sen University, Kaohsiung, Taiwan
Professor Lei Yang earned a PhD
Degree on Environmental Engineering
from the School of Civil Engineering,
Purdue University, USA in 1990.
He works on various issues relating
to environmental and ecological
engineering, especially on constructed
wetlands. Dr. Yang is currently working as a Professor in the
Department of Marine Environment and Engineering, and a
director in the Center for Water Resources Studies at National
Sun Yat-sen University, Kaohsiung, Taiwan. Professor Yang
has been a Visiting Scholar in the College of Agriculture,
Food and Natural Resources, University of Missouri, U.S.A.
In addition, he is currently a Visiting Professor at the Institute
of Hydrobiology, Chinese Academy Sciences, Wuhan, Hubei,
China, and is working as a City Counselor for Kaohsiung City
Government, Taiwan.
Mr Craig Anderson
Chief Executive Officer, Greening Australia WA
Craig Anderson is an agribusiness specialist with a diverse
background in a significant number of primary production
commodities in Australia and Asia. Craig has tertiary
qualifications in forestry and business management and
more than 20 years’ experience in developing, financing and
managing large-scale agribusiness enterprises.
Craig is the WA CEO of Greening Australia. Established in
1982 to mark the Year of the Tree, Greening Australia was
formed by the United Nations Association of Australia and the
Nursery Industry Association of Australia. Since then, it has
developed into the country’s largest practical not-for-profit
environmental organisation.
Craig has a strong background in commercialising projects
in the primary industry sector. This has included various
forestry and horticultural commodities as well as carbon and
environmental offset projects in Australia and Asia.
Craig is also a board member of Gondwana Link, a
collaborative effort entering its tenth year of achievement,
an inspiring example of how a broad spectrum of local,
regional and national groups can work together to conserve
biodiversity with the South-west Biodiversity Hotspot.
20
Conference Program
Dr Berthold Seibert
Project Director, ASEAN GIZ Biodiversity and Climate Change Project, Phillippines
Dr Berthold Seibert is a forester
and biologist (PhD) and has worked
over 30 years in international
development cooperation. After
assignments in Costa Rica at CATIE
and Indonesia at East Kalimantan’s
Mulawarman University, he
assumed senior positions in consulting firms, in forestry and
conservation. While based in Germany, he has dedicated a
considerable period of time to nature conservation projects,
through identification, formulation, evaluation as well as
implementation, in East and Southeast Asia, South and
Central America, and the Maghreb Countries in Africa.
He provided services for most German donor agencies,
besides ADB, EU, IDB, World Bank and ITTO.
From 2002 to 2004 he headed the German Cooperation
Project on Resources Protection in Sichuan Natural Parks
(China). 2004 to 2009 he acted as Project Director in the KfW
financed Natural Resources Protection Project in Cape Verde
(West Africa). Since 2010 he is Project Director in the ASEAN
Centre for Biodiversity – GIZ project on Biodiversity and
Climate Change in ASEAN countries, based in Los Baños,
Philippines. Since 2011 he coordinates the Working Group on
Biodiversity and Climate Change in the GIZ Sector Network
Rural Development – Asia.
Professor Stephen D. Hopper AC
Winthrop Professor of Biodiversity, Centre of Excellence in Natural Resource Management,
and School of Plant Biology, The University of Western Australia
Stephen Hopper is an internationally
recognised plant conservation
biologist who collaborated in
the discovery, classification and
description of 300 new plant taxa.
He served as the Chief Executive
Officer of the Botanic Gardens and Parks Authority in Perth
from 1999 to 2004. In 2006 he became the first non-british
Director of the Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew and led the
development of a 10-year Breathing Planet program at Kew
Gardens which aims to improve the quality of all life on Earth.
In June 2012 Professor Hopper was made a Companion
in the Order of Australia (AC), which is awarded for eminent
achievement and merit of the highest degree in service to
Australia or humanity. Professor Hopper was awarded the
honour ‘for eminent service as a global science leader in
the field of plant conservation biology, particularly in the
delivery of world class research programs contributing to the
conservation of endangered species and ecosystems’.
Stephen Hopper has recently returned to Australia to become
Winthrop Professor of Biodiversity at The University of
Western Australia.
Professor Kingsley Dixon
Director of Science, Kings Park and Botanic Garden
Professor Kingsley Dixon, Director of
Science at Kings Park and Botanic
Garden, has over 26 years experience
in researching the ecology and
physiology of Australian native plants
and ecosystems.
With a focus on an integrated, multi-disciplinary approach,
he leads a team of scientists specialising in seed ecology
and biology, seedbanking, propagation science, conservation
genetics, pollination ecology, and restoration ecology.
21
2013 International BiodiverCities Conference
Parallel Speakers
Mr Jason Alexandra, Honorary Fellow, Charles Darwin University
Mr Martin Brennan, Chief Executive Officer, ICLEI Oceania
Ms Lindie Buirski, Head of Environmental Capacity, Building, Training and Education, City of Cape Town
Ms Toni Burbidge, Coordinator Environment and Sustainability, Shire of Mundaring
Ms Lara O’Neill, Senior Environmental Project Officer, City of Joondalup
Ms Sharon Clark, Manager Environmental Services, Landcorp
Ms Tamika Cook, Biodiversity Project Officer, City of Salisbury
Mr Huxley Lawler, Executive Coordinator – Environment City Planning, City of Gold Coast
Ms Yvonne Lynch, Team Leader, Urban Landscapes, City of Melbourne
Ms Victoria Maguire, Manager, Monitoring, Evaluation, Reporting and Improvement, Perth Region NRM
Mr Widar Narvelo, Municipal Ecologist, Department of Strategic Planning, Helsingborg City
Ms Shela Patrickson, Professional Officer – Biodiversity and Ecosystem Management, ICLEI Cities Biodiversity Centre
Mr Grant Pearsell, Director Office of Biodiversity, Urban Planning and Environment Sustainable Development, City of Edmonton
Professor Laura Stocker, Coastal Collaboration Cluster, Curtin University
Dr Jose Bernal Stoopen, Director–General of Zoological Gardens and Wildlife, Mexico City
Dr Caragh Threlfall – Department of Resource Management and Geography, The University of Melbourne
Mr Ray Wilson, Chief Executive Officer, Carbon Neutral, Western Australia
Ms Renata Zelinova, Local Biodiversity Program Manager, Western Australia Local Government Association
BIOLOGY &
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
When it comes to studying in the areas of science and the environment,
ECU’s world-class research in environmental science (Excellence in Research
for Australia, 2010) and recognised excellence in teaching quality (The Good
Universities Guide, 2013) leaves other universities green with envy. You’ll
find a range of practical degrees that can lead to distinctly different careers
in fields such as marine and freshwater biology, environmental management,
conservation and wildlife biology, sustainability, and more.
That’s how university should be.
For details, call 134 ECU (134 328),
email [email protected] or visit our website.
reachyourpotential.com.au
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22
★★★★★ TEACHING QUALITY
★★★★★ GRADUATE SATISFACTION
The Good Universities Guide 2013
Conference Program
Keynote Speakers – Abstracts
Professor Tim Flannery
The Weather Makers: How Man is Changing the Climate and What it Means for Life on Earth
Drawing on the ideas from his groundbreaking book The
Weathermakers, Tim Flannery presents a straightforward
and powerful exploration of the connection between climate
change, global warming, and human activity. He has a gift for
making complex science understandable for a lay audience,
through a deft use of imagery, analogy and common sense.
But Flannery does not just tell his audience what is happening
to our planet. He very clearly lays out a game plan for halting
current warming trends and beginning the long, but entirely
achievable project of reversing the damage we have done. His
goal is to mobilise his listeners “both personally and politically”
to recognise that we are all “weather makers” and that the
only choice, both logically and ethically, is to begin to address
this problem before it’s too late.
Mr André Mader
Cities, Climate Change, Biodiversity and the UN
Dozens of multilateral environmental agreements (MEAs) exist
worldwide, but there are three that are the most high-profile
and, arguably, the most important. These are the “sister”
United Nations conventions that emerged from the Earth
Summit in Rio de Janeiro in 1992: The Framework Convention
on Climate Change, the Convention to Combat Desertification,
and the Convention on Biological Diversity. These conventions
are intended to guide the actions of the signatory countries
towards a more sustainable global future, and their
secretariats exist to serve this purpose. The decisions
adopted at the regular meetings of the “Conferences of the
Parties” (COPs) to each of the conventions continuously
refine this guidance. While they are proposed, debated, and
adopted or rejected by national governments, it is mostly
at the local and sub-national level that these decisions are
implemented. Nevertheless it was only very recently that local
governments and sub-national implementation were explicitly
addressed in any COP decision. Now that this breakthrough
has been made, there is new promise for local governments
to positively influence our futures and there is much good
work to showcase their potential. There is, however, also
much still to be done.
Dr Michael Dunlop
Climate-ready Biodiversity Conservation
Climate change has the potential to significantly affect
biodiversity in coming decades. We now know many species
and ecosystems are likely to be very sensitive to anticipated
levels of change in carbon dioxide, temperature, rainfall and
fire regimes. In addition, the landscapes where native species
and ecosystems are found, both urban and rural, will change
in response to climate and other drivers, further affecting
biodiversity and how people experience it. In the face of
these significant changes, what does it mean to conserve
biodiversity? What is achievable? In the face of inevitable
change, how might conservation priorities change? What
would conservation success look like?
This is a significant question that may take decades to
resolve. To prompt this journey, I outline three key issues that
will shape how we might need to approach conservation to
be ready for a rapidly changing climate: the magnitude of
ecological change, uncertainty in the detail of change, and
the multiple ways society experiences and benefits from
biodiversity. The talk will illustrate how addressing these
issues together represents a significant departure from many
aspects of current conservation practice. Developing and
implementing a climate-ready approach to conservation
will require new ecological science, innovation in policy and
planning, and considerable debate in the community about
how biodiversity is valued.
23
2013 International BiodiverCities Conference
Keynote Speakers – Abstracts
Dr Paul Hardisty
Valuing Urban Ecosystems in a Changing Climate
A sustainable city. The words conjure up a myriad of images:
super-modern public transport delivering people quickly
and safely to and from play and work; strong and profitable
companies providing long-term employment and a solid tax
base; solar arrays and windmills generating cheap and clean
energy; bike paths; walkable streets; clean beaches and
rivers. But perhaps above all, a sustainable city is a green city.
Urban bushland, trees, green spaces, wetlands, vegetation
buffers and coastal and river fringes provide city residents
with a host of services that are often taken for granted. Until,
that is, they disappear under concrete. A city’s green mantle
is its free cooling system, its – shaded streets and homes
are generally much cooler in summer, reducing the need for
air-conditioning, lowering power bills and reducing emissions.
Recent studies by CSIRO have shown that as the climate
warms, and extreme heat waves become more common
and more pronounced, green, shaded cities are likely to
experience significantly lower heat-related mortality rates than
those where the trees have been taken out. Green streets
are cooler, but they are also quieter (vegetation soaks up and
disperses sound waves), more beautiful, and therefore more
desirable. Estimates from the economic literature suggest
value premiums of between 5% and 40% for urban properties
that are close to parks or major bushland reserves. Cities
like Melbourne have actually valued their 55,000 street trees
as assets. At about $10,000 per mature tree, Melbourne
would be about half a billion dollars worse off without them.
Green spaces in cities also provide vital water and flood
management services, and act as conduits for recharge of
local groundwater. They are places for recreation, leisure,
contemplation, and spirituality. They are also valuable stores
of biodiversity. Recent studies in Perth, Western Australia,
suggest that remaining urban native bushland has a 50 year
present value of somewhere between $1million and $3million
per hectare.
24
As the climate changes, cities around the world face new
challenges. Extreme events such as floods, storm surges,
coastal inundation, fire, wind, and heat waves, are all likely to
become more frequent and severe. Cities will have to start to
adapt to these changes, to become more robust and resilient.
Cities buttressed by ample and healthy urban ecosystems
and green spaces are better able to cope with heat and
intense rainfall. Coastal ecosystems and wetlands attenuate
the effects of storms and buffer against flooding. Recent work
done in the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy in New York, for
instance, suggests that communities with intact or significant
natural coastal habitats suffered much less, and bounced
back more quickly, than those where these natural defences
had been built-over.
By recognising and quantifying all of these sources of value
(often called externalities, because they cannot be traded
in a market, and because they accrue to all of society), and
incorporating this value into decision-making, the net benefit
of various development proposals can be put into a wider
social and environmental context. Often, when this wider
set of values is considered, what seems like the cheapest
option (clear everything and put up houses, for instance), is
revealed to be suboptimal: the proponent may be making a
profit, but society is losing overall. In these cases, a broader
life-cycle environmental, social and economic analysis might
point to other solutions: build up rather than out, reduce
density by retaining green corridors and linking major existing
parks, intensively develop already-cleared or industrial land,
and consider rehabilitating natural bushland on previously
developed or degraded sites.
When urban bushland is lost, when city trees are removed,
each citizen loses something real and tangible. Replacing the
services provided by these natural systems by man-made
ones is expensive. As the climate changes, the importance
and value of these natural assets grows. Sustainable, climateresilient cities of the 21st Century, among their many other
life-enhancing qualities, are, above all, leafy and green.
Conference Program
Professor Haripriya Gundimeda
Ecosystem Service Valuation for Climate Change Mitigation and Adaptation
Human activities have been increasing the annual carbon
concentration in the atmosphere at an average rate of 2
ppm, as per the IPCC estimate in 2007. Reversing the trend
is a mammoth task which cannot be achieved by focusing
on controlling brown-carbon (i.e., emissions from the fossilfuel use and industrial processes) alone. Incentives aimed at
reducing brown-carbon can increase aggregate atmospheric
carbon due to leakages. For example, incentives to promote
biofuels can result in conversion of forestland into biofuel
cropland, which could be a positive net emitter of carbon.
The efforts to reduce the aggregate carbon emissions in the
atmosphere will not be achieved without managing carbon
losses from the terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems. Terrestrial
ecosystems can be sustainably managed for improved
conservation and carbon stock enhancement. In addition,
these ecosystems also deliver many other benefits, which
are highly valuable to society. These ecosystems provide us
provisioning services, regulating services, supporting and
cultural services, which benefit the humans.
Thus, investments in biodiversity and services provided by
terrestrial ecosystems along with providing significant benefits
could contribute significantly and cost-effectively to climate
change mitigation in comparison to alternate carbon mitigation
measures. Recognising, demonstrating and capturing the
value of various ecosystem services and the benefits that
they provide to human well-being is a first step to protect the
natural resources as illustrated by TEEB report. As we cannot
manage what we cannot measure, we need to have effective
tools and indicators to measure and manage our ecosystems.
These have to be integrated into policy making at different
levels. Some of the ways through which ecosystems can be
integrated with climate change mitigation efforts are through
payment for ecosystem services, REDD plus, Access to
Benefit sharing, Eco-certification schemes, no-net biodiversity
loss, biodiversity offsets etc. There is a very strong role of
international, national, sub-national, local authorities, public
private partnerships and private sectors in mobilising finances
to achieve this goal.
Dr Åsa Gren
Global Urbanization, Biodiversity, and Ecosystems – Challenges and Opportunities
Cities and Biodiversity Outlook – Scientific Analyses and Assessments
Dr Åsa Gren is the coordinating lead author of one of the
core chapters of the Cities and Biodiversity Outlook’s Ebook, Global Urbanization, Biodiversity, and Ecosystems –
Challenges and Opportunities Cities and Biodiversity Outlook
– Scientific Analyses and Assessments.
The presentation will include a broad overview of the
conclusions of the assessment and stress the point that in
order to meet the challenges of climate change, one must
also include the effects of other drivers of change, such as
population increase, urbanisation and land use change.
The presentation will also include specific examples of how
one can go about actually quantifying and valuing complex
and complicated parameters such as biodiversity and
resilience in a sustainable urban development context.
The issue of building resilience is key in preparing for future
change in major drivers such as climate change and changes
in global market prices. But how can one do that in practice?
25
2013 International BiodiverCities Conference
Keynote Speakers – Abstracts
Professor Bruce Clarkson
Bringing Indigenous Biodiversity back into Hamilton and other New Zealand Cities
New Zealand’s 20 largest urban centres vary considerably in
terms of their extant indigenous biodiversity resource in the
built up matrix (<1% to 9% cove-+catchment scale ecosystem
processes and function are restored. Further, a convergence
of many skills including engineering, landscape architecture,
aboriculture, horticulture and ecology is needed to undertake
successful restoration in city environments. Examples will be
drawn from Hamilton and other North Island cities to illustrate
how coordination, convergence and integration can assist in
bringing indigenous nature back into the city and reconnecting
urban dwellers with their natural heritage.
Dr Debra Roberts
Using Biodiversity to Build a Climate Smart City: the Story of Durban, South Africa
Durban is well known internationally for the development of
its Municipal Climate Protection Program, and is one of the
few cities around the world to have shown a strong and early
focus on climate change adaptation. Durban is also located in
one of the world’s 34 global diversity hotspots. This offers the
city a significant opportunity to increase its adaptive capacity
through the protection, restoration and management of local
level biodiversity, while also generating co-benefits such as
capacity building, poverty alleviation and job creation. The
26
importance of ecosystem based adaptation is highlighted
in the Durban Adaptation Charter signed by 107 mayors
representing 950 local governments at the local government
convention held at the United Nations Framework Convention
on Climate Change’s COP17/CMP7 in Durban in 2011.
The ecosystem based adaptation work being undertaken
by eThekwini Municipality will be discussed during this
presentation and lessons learned highlighted.
Conference Program
Ms Anissa Lawrence
Blue Carbon: Reducing the Impacts of Climate Change by Conserving Coastal Ecosystems
Coastal ecosystems, in particular seagrass, tidal salt marsh
and mangroves collectively referred to as blue carbon
sinks, sequester and store carbon from the atmosphere
at rates much higher than those of terrestrial ecosystems
such as tropical forests. In addition they provide invaluable
ecosystem services to build the resilience of vulnerable coastal
communities against climate change as well as a range of
other environmental, economic and social benefits. The Asia
Pacific region, in particular the Coral Triangle region of southeast Asia contains the majority of the world’s mangroves and
seagrass and there is growing interest in the role of these
ecosystems in climate change adaptation and mitigation
strategies. The carbon storage and sequestration potential
of these coastal ecosystems provides an opportunity to
strengthen socio-economic resilience of coastal communities,
avoid significant emissions from ecosystem degradation,
while also supporting existing wetland conservation efforts.
Protection and restoration of blue carbon sinks is an
ecosystem based approach to climate change adaptation
that offers financing opportunities that would accomplish
both resilience building in coastal communities while also
contributing to the global reduction of greenhouse gas (GHG)
emissions. This presentation provides an overview of global
initiatives underway, the current state of science, laws and
policy and future opportunities for management of coastal
ecosystems, providing case studies from Australia and the
Coral Triangle.
Professor Lei Yang
The Concept of “Blue Carbon” Applied in Carbon Sequestration by the Coastal Wetland Parks in Kaohsiung City, Taiwan
Kaohsiung City is the second largest city in Taiwan with
population of 2.8million, which is mostly concentrated
within the metropolitan area with population density of
10,000 persons/Km2. In addition, Kaohsiung City is also
an industrial and harbour city. Kaohsiung Port is the largest
port in Taiwan. Twenty years ago, the citizens of Kaohsiung
City still suffered from bad water and air quality because so
many manufactories were built in this industrial city. However,
ten years ago the city government decided to get rid of the
notoriety of “pollution city”, and began to devote itself to
developing an eco-environment and shaping the greatest area
of green space of any city in Taiwan to let the city be reborn
from an industrial city to an eco-city.
To achieve this goal, the Koahsiung City Government
proposed a master plan of constructing wetland parks for
greening the city. Since 2000, the first wetland of Niaosong
Wetland Park has been completed, up to now there are
eighteen wetlands established in the city exceeding 900
hectares, which includes many diverse landscapes. These
wetlands can be sorted into coastal and inland types, referring
to their geographic locations, as well as natural or artificial
types, referring to their formations. The concept of “Blue
Carbon” refers to carbon and its related compounds in the
marine environment including oceanic water body, seabed,
and vegetated coastal habitats (wetlands), e.g. mangrove
forests, salt-marshes and seagrass meadows. Thus, the
“Blue Carbon” mechanism may let the coastal wetlands
play a role as carbon sinks through carbon sequestration by
both vegetation and sediments in wetlands. Several studies
have proved that the coastal wetland systems can function
as a carbon sink by measuring their balance of sorption and
emission of greenhouse gases, such as carbon dioxide (CO2),
methane (CH4), and Nitrous oxide (N2O). In this report, several
salt water type wetlands, including one inland tidal wetland
(Jhongdou Wetland) and four coastal wetlands (Cieding
Wetland, Yongan Wetland, Yuanjhong Harbour Wetland,
and Linyuan Marine Wetland), of the eighteen wetlands in
Kaohsiung City mentioned previously were studied for their
carbon sink effects through measuring their ability of carbon
sequestration based on the concept of “Blue Carbon”.
According to the measuring results, it was concluded that the
four wetlands located in the coastal areas of Kaohsiung City
showed significant carbon sink effects, while the inland tidal
wetland exhibits negative effects, which might be due to less
dilution effects from tidal river water connecting the wetland.
Further studies are required.
27
2013 International BiodiverCities Conference
Keynote Speakers – Abstracts
Mr Craig Anderson
Restoring Biodiversity through Corporate and Community Partnerships
Greening Australia is the nation’s largest environmental
NGO and has been actively engaged in the restoration of
critical Australian landscapes for over 30 years. The primary
mandate of the not-for-profit charity is to engage the broader
community in the recognition of the loss of critical habitats and
to assist in the restoration of these landscapes.
The increasing mantra of corporate social responsibility has
resulted in businesses taking a far greater interest in the health
of the environment and the well-being of their employees.
This initiative can be highly leveraged to achieve critical
environmental outcomes that benefit social and financial
outcomes for organisations and communities.
The critical success path of achieving these objectives is
through effective and efficient engagement of local community
and local businesses. Land care has long been the mantra
of tireless landowners and farmers who have toiled away for
decades restoring and caring for their land.
The presentation will highlight some of the effective
mechanisms that have been used to foster corporate and
community engagement in landscape restoration and
examples of effective programs achieved.
Dr Berthold Seibert
Global Partnerships in Biodiversity Conservation from a Regional Perspective
The ASEAN Centre for Biodiversity( ACB) – Reflections on three years with the Biodiversity and Climate Change Project
The paper presents an ongoing process of developing a
young regional government organisation, operating in the
interface between Biodiversity proper, the major drivers
of biodiversity loss, and the pathway towards effective
conservation of ecosystems and species. The globalisation
of finances and markets, the global effects of climate change
and the global sustainable development agenda from Rio’92
on through the Millennium Challenge, the Climate and the
Biodiversity negotiations to Rio +20 have created a niche and
a market for regional intermediaries between national and
global agendas on sustainable development in a wider sense.
While such intermediaries exist in all continents in the green
sector mainly on food security, regional intergovernmental
organisations adressing conservation and the related policy
agenda are scarce. One of the few, and most probably the
best consolidated though young of these organisations is
ACB, the ASEAN Centre for Biodiversity, an organisation of
the ASEAN.
Its mandate – see also on www.aseanbiodiversity.org – can
simply be described as “Getting the message across”. Having
28
a mandate is not enough, though, to run an organisation.
Securing sufficient qualified staff to address the international
agenda while maintaining the support for member states is
a constant challenge, as is sustainable financing. The sector
where ACB operates requires a frequent re-strategising in the
interface between science/knowledge and policy/development
agenda in member states, ASEAN and on a global level.
The “ASEAN Charter” is supportive of a “Roadmap for an
ASEAN Community 2009-2015”, but at the same time,
ASEAN Member States’ policies are driven by national rather
than regional or global considerations. In this environment,
the Programme “German Cooperation with ACB” pursues
several strategies to strengthen ACB’s mandate, like its
active participation in global biodiversity partnerships and
link them to the ASEAN region. Besides capacity building
and training on ACB’s and Member States’ level, pilot project
implementation on the ground aims at providing best cases
for biodiversity conservation in the region, and to increasingly
enable ACB to act as a facilitator between the global
conservation agenda and the ASEAN members state’s needs.
Conference Program
Professor Stephen D. Hopper AC
Plant Diversity, Granite Outcrops, Cities, and Climate Mitigation – Global Research and Prospects
An estimated 400,000 species of plants occur on Earth, of
which approximately 360,000 have been scientifically named,
and 80,000 are threatened. Plant diversity is unevenly spread,
being richest in the tropics and in the five temperate regions
with a Mediterranean climate. Cities like Rio de Janeiro,
Cape Town and Perth have exceptional plant diversity, and
a major role to play in city-based biodiversity conservation
in a warming world. Destruction of wild biodiversity for
development of cities has now overtaken land clearing for
agriculture as a major conservation threat. This has to stop if
the worst aspects of global warming are to be averted, and
be reversed through innovative programs that reintroduce and
restore native biodiversity to cities. Granite outcrops are tough
environments full of microhabitats mirroring those in cities.
Plants on outcrops are playing an increasing role in green roof
and green wall developments. Cities such as Singapore have
led the way in terms of greening urban habitats in the tropics.
Perth and Cape Town could do even better for temperate city
developments. Positive conservation and use of plant diversity
in cities offers a message of hope in the search for successful
mitigation strategies to counter global warming. There is
urgency and wisdom in greening cities soon in a rapidly
changing world, and great conservation benefits if native
biodiversity is mainstreamed in such ventures.
• Environmental approvals
• Environmental impact assessments
• Environmental auditing
• Flora and fauna surveys
• Environmental licensing
• Revegetation planning
• Sampling and monitoring
• Ecological studies and research
• Vegetation offsets
• Management plans
• Project management
Phone: +61 8 9209 2767
Mobile: +61 439 435 110
Email: [email protected]
www.naturalareaconsulting.com.au
29
2013 International BiodiverCities Conference
Parallel Speakers – Abstracts
Mr Jason Alexandra
Biodiverse Mega Cities – A Design Brief
A fundamental question facing humanity is how do we sustain
humans and other species (biodiversity) given that the world
operates as one vast interconnected system that relentlessly
exploits natural resources. This presentation outlines a design
brief for biodiverse cities - an overstated situation analysis
framing the context is followed by an indication of prospective
areas for solutions development and deployment.
The modern world functions as a giant global city with over
4billion people - this unprecedented empire of consumption
is linked by transport networks moving materials, goods and
peoples on a scale unparalleled in human history. Flotillas
of ships, countless trucks and trains and squadrons of
airplanes criss-cross the planet. Everyday huge numbers of
people move. Millions of motor vehicles deliver the armies of
commuters needed to sustain commerce and the institutions
of state. A vast global hinterland supplies food, fibre, water
and raw materials. Armies of machines reshape the face of the
earth – building, mining, farming etc - while millions of pumps
and cascades of dams remodel the hydrology of the world’s
rivers, catchments and aquifers. Fleets of trawlers dredge the
oceans to supply the city’s insatiable desire for seafood.
A global biodiversity and extinction crisis is unfolding due
to the cumulative impacts of the cities’ relentless appetites
and technological prowess. A range of shocks could
accelerate this crisis including the unfolding climate chaos
with intensifying droughts in the mid latitudes and devastating
monsoonal floods in the tropics.
During the 20th century, the world population tripled, water
use increased six-fold and the area devoted to agriculture
escalated. Technology, consumption patterns and growth
in population delivered unprecedented rates of change to
global systems. Humans became the world’s dominant
evolutionary force. The 21st century is the “Anthropocene”.
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Therefore, as citizens of the Anthropocene we must accept
our new responsibilities for looking after both human needs
and the planetary life support systems including biodiversity.
We must learn how to “garden” the planet out of self-interest
and to sustain culture and nature. We need the “global city” to
function and thrive while transitioning it to a system that can:
1.Conserve and enhance biodiversity and sustain critical
ecosystem services.
2.Supply 9billion people’s needs for food and resources.
3.Operate after the end of cheap fossil energy and the
decarbonising of the economy (eg. reduce emissions and
increase sequestration).
4.Adapt to climatic chaos unprecedented since the birth
of agriculture.
The following are suggested as possible directions:
1.Mobilise global interest and resources towards biodiverse
cities, both within the cities’ precincts and through their
functional relationships –eg. supply chains.
2.Celebrate nature and incorporate biodiversity conservation
as a priority into the physical and cultural fabric of the city.
3.Innovate the innovation systems - unleash human creativity
in all its forms, especially in the design or sustainability
sciences that can help reshape cities and civilisations.
4.Develop “green” design solutions in urban planning, water
and energy infrastructure, building and manufacturing.
5.Support urban food gardens and peri-urban farming, that
is diverse and uses a design based approach to maximising
synergistic benefits.
6.Unleash a global program of eco restoration, reafforestation
and permaculture.
Conference Program
Ms Victoria Maguire and Ms Toni Burbidge
Partnerships to Enhance Biodiversity – What We Do and Who We Do It With
Ever wondered how successful biodiversity projects are
created, steering groups formed, performance criteria met,
smiling volunteers involved, and strategic plans objectives
fulfilled? Well this presentation will take a look behind the
scenes at Perth Region NRM (PRNRM) and their partnerships
to provide insight into what they do and who they do it with.
PRNRM is an independent not-for-profit organisation who
assist in establishing partnerships to coordinate a range of
natural resource management projects across the Swan
Region of Western Australia. They bring together people of
diverse interests, expertise and experience to help deliver
positive biodiversity outcomes. Biodiversity is one of PRNRM’s
five project themes which aim to conserve and enhance the
terrestrial and aquatic biodiversity as well as habitat of all
native species.
The Eastern Catchment Management Plan Project is a
partnership between Shire of Mundaring, Shire of Kalamunda,
East Metropolitan Regional Council, Swan River Trust, Perth
Region NRM and local Friends of and Catchment Groups. It
is a project that focusses on the history, present and future
of catchment management in the Eastern Perth Region. It
brings together partnerships between local, regional, state
government and the community to provide a clear vision for
biodiversity management in the Eastern Catchments. With
a diverse and active community network of over 130 friends
groups, four catchment groups, 1,700 volunteers contributing
over 30,000 volunteer hours per annum, why wouldn’t local,
regional, state government and Perth Region NRM need a
framework and implementation plan for the next 10 years in
catchment management?
Yes there are organisations that partner every day to enhance
biodiversity. This presentation focuses on the bigger picture on
what’s being done and who with and you might just see that
from a small seed, big things grow.
Ms Yvonne Lynch
Redesigning our Cities as Ecosystem Service Centres in a Challenging Climate: the City of Melbourne Experience
Melbourne’s environment is facing many challenges:
population growth and intensification, urban heating, climate
change alongside the decline and loss of green infrastructure.
The cumulative impact of these is creating less healthy
urban environments with diminishing quality of city life and
ecosystem services provision.
This presentation will outline how City of Melbourne is
embracing a multidisciplinary approach to responding to these
challenges and how a move towards nature sensitive urban
design is seeking to support ecosystem service provision
and position green infrastructure and integrated water
management as a critical to city development.
How do we respond to these challenges whilst increasing the
resilience of our public realm and creating a legacy for future
generations? Is it possible to rethink the way we design our
cities to position ecosystem services provision as central?
Can we equate the importance of green infrastructure with
the critical city status we have traditionally imbued upon
grey infrastructure? Can we shift from a focus on biodiversity
conservation to a focus on creation?
It will detail a response that seeks to transform Melbourne’s
urban landscapes with ambitious city targets for green
infrastructure development to mitigate and adapt to climate
change impacts. It will focus on a range of current projects
including green roofs, urban forest development, integrated
water management, stormwater harvesting, green space
provision and connectivity, temporary parks and
permeability expansion.
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2013 International BiodiverCities Conference
Parallel Speakers – Abstracts
Ms Lindie Buirski
Practical Tools to Evaluate Biodiversity Communication Education and Public Awareness (CEPA)
Projects and Programs
The City of Cape Town was one of the 21 pioneering local
governments to pilot the Local Action for Biodiversity (LAB)
Pioneer Project. Many of the original LAB Pioneers, including
the City of Cape Town, have been focussing on the important
role of biodiversity Communication, Education and Public
Awareness (CEPA) in Local Action for Biodiversity, also in the
context of climate change. The first step was an assessment
of these local authorities’ CEPA activities. The City of Cape
Town’s initial assessment illustrated that while many education
and awareness activities have been completed and are
underway, there is a critical need to understand how targeted,
appropriate and successful they are. Have the CEPA activities
resulted in changes in understanding of biodiversity and
climate change, and changes in behaviour?
One of ICLEI’s priorities is to provide tools and resources
for local governments, share knowledge and build
capacity. Partners concluded that an evaluation tool that
is internationally relevant to CEPA activities will fill a critical
gap. There is a need for a resource to assist not only local
governments but also NGOs and others to design, implement,
monitor and evaluate their CEPA projects, programmes and
resources, making use of evaluation methods and indicators
that are appropriate for the complex processes, and longer
term, open ended outcomes involved in awareness raising,
environmental education and social change. ICLEI and the
City of Cape Town therefore invested in the development of
such a resource.
The resultant resource provides a wider range of case studies
from South Africa, Brazil, Canada and Japan, and guidelines
for implementation, with a specific focus on indicators suitable
for biodiversity CEPA activities. A particular innovation in the
new toolkit is the integration of a systems approach to CEPA
and evaluation, combined with the logical planning framework
which is more commonly used in donor funded projects
around the SADC region. The presentation will introduce the
toolkit and how to use it in planning to conduct an evaluation
of your biodiversity CEPA activities. In the process, you will
also help us to further develop the resource.
Mr Ray Wilson
Enhancing Local Biodiversity through Reforestation Carbon Sinks
Native biodiversity in Australia is particularly vulnerable to
agricultural intensification and urban development. Biodiversity
decline is regarded as one of the megatrends that could
severely impact Australia over the coming decades. The
low carbon economy and development of voluntary and
compliance markets that support bio-sequestration of carbon
could bring about land use change that could significantly
improve retention of native biodiversity in Australian
agricultural landscapes.
As well as removing carbon from the atmosphere, biodiverse
tree plantings provide environmental co-benefits by
addressing land conservation issues including soil erosion,
water logging, salinisation and habitat loss for native birds and
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fauna. Such projects vastly improve the aesthetics of the area
being planted and help showcase Australia’s commitment
to positive environmental change, both at a local and
international level.
Carbon Neutral has developed over 100 carbon reforestation
sink projects. These are supported by a loyal and diverse
client base keen to improve the environment by offsetting their
carbon emissions and addressing land degradation through
tree planting. Key technical, financial, legal, marketing, and
stakeholder engagement challenges are outlined, with lessons
learnt providing opportunities for the development of Urban
Forest Offsets.
Conference Program
Ms Shela Patrickson and Mr Martin Brennan
ICLEI’s Local Action for Biodiversity - Australia (LAB - Australia): Strengthening Local and National Connections
ICLEI-Local Governments for Sustainability, in partnership with
Western Australian Local Governments Association (WALGA),
and with support from the City of Joondalup, is proposing an
Australian-wide local government programme focussed on
enhancing biodiversity conservation at the local government
level. LAB-Australia is founded on ICLEI’s flagship international
Local Action for Biodiversity programme, but is tailored to the
Australian context, including the needs at the local level, and
aligning with the biodiversity objectives at the national level.
At the heart of this initiative is strengthening the alignment
between local and national biodiversity and ecosystem
management, supporting the international decisions made
at previous Convention on Biological Diversity Conference
of the Parties (CBD COPs), which were ratified by all the
CBD signatories, including Australia. The mechanism for
implementing LAB-Australia is through the creation of Local
Biodiversity Strategies and Action Plans (LBSAPs) and making
the links with local planning structures at the regional level
through the Natural Resource Management (NRM) regions.
This presentation will outline the proposal, and then encourage
discussion and comments from the audience to fine-tune the
details of implementation.
Ms Renata Zelinova
Tools Supporting Local Biodiversity Conservation in the South West Of Western Australia
Since 2001, the Western Australian Local Government
Association’s Biodiversity Projects have been developing
decision support tools and providing spatial information to
encourage strategic consideration of biodiversity locally.
In Western Australia, the State Government has been
distinguishing between regionally and locally significant areas
for biodiversity conservation since 1995. However, it was
not until the release of the Local Government Biodiversity
Planning Guidelines for the Perth Metropolitan Region that a
methodology for identifying and prioritising locally significant
natural areas was available. The Guidelines, developed by
the Perth Biodiversity Project, include local natural area
prioritisation criteria, templates and step-by-step methodology
for the development of Local Biodiversity Strategies. While
facilitating consistent and rigorous prioritisation process, the
Guidelines and the Project services provide for the different
capacities of Local Governments.
The adaptability of the local biodiversity conservation planning
to other regions of Western Australia have been demonstrated
through the work of the South West Biodiversity Project and
through the latest expansion of local biodiversity conservation
planning to other regional centres experiencing development
pressures such as Geraldton and Albany.
The support provided to Local Governments facilitates
the development of Local Biodiversity Strategies and their
implementation through integration with local land use
planning, strategic planning for local reserve management and
community engagement. This is through the provision of most
up to date information on native vegetation status at regional
and local scale, technical advice and mapping services,
including the delivery of an on-line mapping viewer with
interpreted environmental information. The mapping viewer
has been designed to improve efficiency in consideration
of biodiversity matters and cross boundary issues such as
landscape connectivity in local land use planning.
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2013 International BiodiverCities Conference
Parallel Speakers – Abstracts
Professor Laura Stocker
Opportunities to Enhance Biodiversity in Coastal Adaptation to Climate Change
Where it is considered at all, coastal adaptation to sea level
rise is typically viewed as a task for planners and engineers,
not community. The governance and management emphases
have been very much on how we can prevent negative
impacts of coastal erosion and storm surge on the built
environment and infrastructure, with much less emphasis
on biodiversity protection. In WA, the newly revised and
gazetted State Coastal Planning Policy (SPP2.6) does seek
to create important opportunities for protecting biodiversity
through important measures such as the coastal foreshore
reserves. However, here I suggest that we can go further with
biodiversity protection by embedding coastal adaptation in a
broader more engaged approach at a local government level,
so local governments can make coastal adaptation a process
that enhances the biodiversity of our coastlines. The principles
of this approach are:
•Learn from Indigenous stories: explore how the shorelines
and ecosystems have changed over the last ice age and
subsequent warming period.
•Use a sustainability framework: equally consider ecological,
social, cultural and economic dimensions.
•Think long-term about strategy and resilience: identify
how ecosystems contribute to the resilience of coastal
communities and how ecosystems are threatened by
sea level rise.
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•Engage inclusively to enhance community learning, literacy
and capacity: enable the whole local community to better
understand the place of biodiversity protection in coastal
adaptation to climate change.
•Work with community champions: support existing coastal
groups and spokespeople to promote appreciation of
coastal biodiversity and its vulnerability to climate change.
•Enable community monitoring and coastal sustainability
report cards: support locals to be involved in biodiversity
monitoring within a structured methodology that will
improve management.
•Support community art and cultural development: create
cultural opportunities for community to celebrate coastal
biodiversity and reflect on its vulnerability to climate change.
•Develop partnerships and boundary processes: enhance
the sharing of coastal biodiversity information, resources
and ideas across challenging science-policy boundaries.
•Use SPP2.6 to its fullest capacity to protect biodiversity:
embed policy in town planning guidelines.
•Mitigate to adapt: protect biodiversity by reducing
CO2 emissions.
Conference Program
Dr Caragh Threlfall
Increasing Biodiversity Habitat Using Urban Green Infrastructure
Urbanisation causes the destruction and degradation of
remnant vegetation that provides habitat to a wide array of
biodiversity. A proactive way of overcoming the shortage of
remnant habitats in urban areas is to increase the habitat
value of the green infrastructure present in cities. Urban
Green Infrastructure is the network of designed and natural
vegetation found in our cities and towns which provides many
vital ecosystem services that sustain and enrich the quality
of life. It includes public parks, recreation areas, residential
gardens and street trees, as well as innovative new urban
greening technologies such as rain gardens, green roofs
and green walls. We have been investigating how green
infrastructure can provide biodiversity habitat at a variety
of scales.
Golf courses are large areas of green space but are not
managed specifically for biodiversity. We surveyed the
biodiversity and vegetation structure of golf courses in
southeast Melbourne and compared them to surrounding
residential areas and parks. Across the green space network
investigated, we recorded 19 species of bees, 95 species
of bugs, 106 species of birds and 10 bat species. Overall
we found that golf courses and residential areas supported
diverse insect communities, however golf courses were
observed, on average, to support a greater diversity of bugs
than residential areas, and a different community of native
bees. We observed almost twice as many bird species and
twice as much bird breeding activity in golf courses than in
surrounding residential landscapes. Golf courses also had a
higher proportion of course woody debris and hollow bearingtrees, and had greater vegetation structural complexity in
comparison to surrounding residential areas. These results
suggest that simple interventions such as reduced mowing
and providing key nesting structures such as dead wood or
logs on the ground can allow certain groups of biodiversity to
persist in these urban green spaces.
Green roofs are systems of drainage layers and light-weight
substrates engineered to support the growth of plants on
buildings. Because roofs are a harsh environment for plant
growth due to shallow substrates and high levels of solar
radiation and evaporation they are typically planted with a
limited suite of succulent plants that may have little habitat
value for biodiversity. We have helped to develop green roofs
planted with a range of drought tolerant native grassland
species and are surveying them to determine their value as
invertebrate habitat. It is hoped that by increasing the habitat
value of both large and small green infrastructure elements
cities can support a greater range of biodiversity.
Mrs Lara O’Neill
Conserving Urban Wetlands through Community Involvement
Environmental management is a key role of local government
and, while the responsibility is shared with other spheres
of government, the City of Joondalup implements many
programs, policies and strategies in partnership with
stakeholders and the community, to ensure the long term
protection of the local environment.
As a co-manager of Yellagonga Regional Park, a wetland
region of high conservation significance, the City of Joondalup
developed in partnership with key regional stakeholders, the
Yellagonga Integrated Catchment Management Plan. The
Plan establishes a coordinated approach towards sustainable
planning and management of resources within the Yellagonga
Catchment and includes a number of projects to address key
threats and increase the health of the wetland area.
A key focus of the Plan is to raise community awareness
of the biodiversity values of the Yellagonga Wetlands while
encouraging participation and partnerships. To achieve this
the City developed the Yellagonga Community Awareness
Program, an ongoing environmental education program that
incorporates a range of education and eco-tourism initiatives
that address key environmental issues and facilitate greater
environmental stewardship of the Yellagonga Catchment Area,
within the community.
Lara O’Neill, Senior Environmental Project Officer will discuss
the components of the Yellagonga Community Awareness
Program and the outcomes that have been achieved through
the implementation of the Yellagonga Integrated Catchment
Management Plan.
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2013 International BiodiverCities Conference
Parallel Speakers – Abstracts
Mr Huxley Lawler
City of Gold Coast: Balancing Conservation Outcomes
The City of Gold Coast is Australia’s largest coastal council,
situated at the northern extent of temperate and southern
extent of tropical zones. It is one of Australia’s most biodiverse
cities with 604 fauna and 1,672 flora species, including 146
threatened species, and 75 vegetation communities.
and how strategic ecological corridors were established
across altitudinal gradients from the coast to the elevated
hinterland, providing both migration pathways for species
likely to be impacted by projected climate variability and
opportunities to secure vulnerable vegetation communities.
With a population of 560,000 people anticipated to increase to
800,000 by 2031, the delicate balance between development,
economic growth and biodiversity is a constant challenge.
Huxley will discuss the evolution of the City’s 16-year old
Nature Conservation Strategy, now in it’s second generation,
Huxley will also provide a brief overview of the East Coomera
Koala Conservation Project, a scientific research project
conducted by Council on the translocation of Koalas (a
Federally listed species in Queensland) from areas committed
to development to conservation estate.
Mr Widar Narvelo
Management of Biodiversity in Helsingborg, Sweden: Key Factors for Mainstreaming
The presentation will discuss some of the primary
mechanisms that Helsingborg has used to mainstream
biodiversity into city management.
Topics covered will include legislation, plans and projects,
and some examples that have been successful in the City of
Helsingborg. It is a rather complex and long history for the
holistic approach in planning. Some key factors starts with the
historical national love of nature, highly engaged employees
and a rather strong legislation.
Ms Tamika Cook
Integration of Biodiversity into the Urban Landscape – City of Salisbury Biodiversity Corridors
The City of Salisbury Council is located 25 kilometres North
of Adelaide and occupies an area of 161 square kilometres
extending from the shores of Gulf St Vincent to the Para
Escarpment within the foothills of the Mount Lofty Ranges.
The population is 130,000 people, and in 2009, recorded the
largest growth of any local government area in the Adelaide
Metropolitan region. To ameliorate urban infill and climate
change pressures on Biodiversity, the City of Salisbury
developed a Biodiversity Corridors Management Plan, which
was endorsed by Council in early 2010. The Plan identifies five
corridors within the City, within which we are trying to mimic
pre-European grassy woodland ecosystems.
The Plan takes into account many other factors such as fire
safety requirements, Crime Prevention Through Environmental
Design principles (CPTED), riparian vegetation management
and an increased community engagement and awareness.
The Biodiversity team has been working hard to implement
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the first stage of this Plan, which saw the direct seeding of
9 hectares of grasses along a riparian corridor one year ago.
This has also seen 18 months of site preparation of this area,
and two seed production areas established so that the City of
Salisbury can grow and harvest all of their own seed required
to implement the Plan, rather than sourcing seed elsewhere,
which could be more costly, time consuming and not of
local provenance.
As a ‘sister’ document to the Biodiversity Corridors
Management Plan, the City of Salisbury also developed a
Watercourse Management Plan last year which, aims to
use natural watercourse design and management to control
erosion. Last year, the City of Salisbury trialled, with great
concept, the concept of ‘Living Bags’, essentially hessian
sandbags with aquatics planted into them, where eventually
the roots of these plants will grow through the bags to stabilise
the soil and banks on which they are installed.
Conference Program
Ms Sharon Clark
Integrating the Built Environment with the Natural
As the Western Australian State Government’s land
development agency, LandCorp is responsible for helping
secure economic and social prosperity for all Western
Australians. This means developing suitable industrial,
commercial and residential land for development in both urban
and regional areas across the State.
Presently, LandCorp is implementing 180 projects. Each
project is located in its own environmental setting. In
implementing its projects, LandCorp seeks to minimise its
impact on the natural environment. This presentation provides
urban, and regional examples of where LandCorp has
designed developments to protect, and in some instances
enhance, the natural environment.
Mr Grant Pearsell
Collaboration and Integration in Edmonton, Canada: Biodiversity Planning and Communication, Education
and Public Awareness (CEPA)
Edmonton, Alberta in western Canada, has a long history of
nature conservation and over decades has created the largest
municipally owned park in Canada with much of the park
conserved in a natural state. In addition, the City has protected
over 70 smaller natural areas throughout the community.
This presentation will give an overview of the City of
Edmonton’s Master Naturalist Program.
This program is a learn and serve program that partners City
staff with community leaders to teach citizens how to lead
new biodiversity projects in our community. This program
has proved to be a powerful vehicle to communicate the
City’s biodiversity goals and to connect with our community’s
strengths and values to create a better community.
37
2013 International BiodiverCities Conference
Parallel Speakers – Abstracts
Dr. José Bernal Stoopen
Integration of Biodiversity into the Urban Landscape in Mexico City
Local authorities have a crucial role in biodiversity
conservation. Sub-national and local governments represent
the sphere of government closest to the people. Local
authorities usually transform policies into action and have a
strong impact on biodiversity conservation especially when
cities are home to more than 50% of the world population and
utilise 75% of the resources used by humans in the world.
In fact, Cities, have strong dependence on ecosystems to
support food, water and many other key resources.
Through this same international initiative, Mexico City has
also produced a Local Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan
(LBSAP). This document represents the action plan to be
implemented by Mexico City to conserve its biodiversity. This
strategy and action plan has the main following five objectives:
Mexico City signed the esteemed Durban Commitment
in 2010 and started participating in the Local Action for
Biodiversity (LAB) Program, coordinated by the ICLEI - Local
Governments for Sustainability. Mexico City also participates
actively in the Global Partnership for Local and Subnational
Action Advisory Committee, established by the Convention
Biological Diversity (CBD).
3. To consolidate an effective system of law enforcement for
the protection of biodiversity.
Through the LAB Program, Mexico City has completed
for the first time a Biodiversity Report (BR). More than 50
specialists participated in this process coordinated by
the General Director of Zoological Parks and Wildlife and
the National Commission for the Knowledge and Use of
Biodiversity (CONABIO). This biodiversity diagnosis, integrates
key information about the richness and status of the main
components of biodiversity.
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1. To protect and conserve the three levels of biodiversity.
2. To promote the social, cultural and economic value
of biodiversity.
4. To develop a local, national and international first level
policy on biodiversity.
5. To promote the sustainable use of biodiversity in Mexico City.
Mexico City will formalise as a priority action, a Biodiversity
Intersectorial Committee with the participation of more than
10 key local government agencies. We will also establish an
Advisory Citizen Biodiversity Committee, with the participation
of specialists, advocates, developers and citizens. Through
the establishment and operation of these Committees, we will
be able to start enforcing biodiversity as a key element for the
urban landscape planning and development in Mexico City.
Environmental
Management
in the City
As the second largest local government, by
population, in Western Australia, the City of
Joondalup is responsible for the management
of a diverse number of natural environments.
With over 300 diverse natural areas and public
open spaces that support a range of unique
plants and animals, the City of Joondalup
is committed to working in partnership with
stakeholders and the community, to ensure
the long-term protection of the environment for
future generations.
The City of Joondalup takes a coordinated,
proactive and holistic approach to planning
and delivering various programs and adopting
policies towards achieving improved biodiversity
outcomes and this innovative approach
to environmental management has been
recognised locally, nationally and internationally
as best practice.
joondalup.wa.gov.au
39
The City of Joondalup would like to acknowledge its sponsors and partners for their contribution
to the 2013 International BiodiverCities Conference.
Principal Sponsor
Major Sponsors
Supporting Sponsors
Partners
LAB
Local
Governments
for Sustainability
Local Action for Biodiversity
AN I C L E I – I U C N P R O G R A M M E
T: 08 9400 4000
F: 08 9300 1383
Boas Avenue Joondalup WA 6027
PO Box 21 Joondalup WA 6919
joondalup.wa.gov.au
This document is available in alternate formats upon request.
Printed on 100% recycled paper.