Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Environmental Knowledge
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This record provides an overview of the NESP Marine and Coastal Hub Research Plan 2024 project "An Indigenous-led approach to advance the health and wellbeing of Tebrakunna Country and people of the Coastal Plains nation, north-eastern Tasmania". No data outputs are planned for this project. -------------------- Tebrakunna Country in north-eastern Tasmania is a significant place for Tasmanian Aboriginal people and the Country of the Coastal Plains nation. Reconnecting to ancestral land and sea Country, restoring Aboriginal land management practices, and strengthening links between healthy Country and healthy people are central priorities for the Melaythenner Teeackana Warrana (Heart of Country) Aboriginal Corporation (MTWAC). This Indigenous-led and co-designed project, delivered by MTWAC and the University of Tasmania across all four NESP Hubs, will support Healthy Country Planning for Tebrakunna. MTWAC Indigenous researchers, Tebrakunna Country rangers and community members, and western scientists will work together to identify priority values, targets, threats and viability of Tebrakunna land and sea Country. The project will compile environmental, cultural and social information through MTWAC-led workshops and related research activities. It will develop approaches to assess the wellbeing benefits of connection to Country and on-Country activities, including spiritual, emotional, physical, socio-economic and environmental dimensions. It will also identify research, monitoring and capacity-building priorities, including opportunities in Sea Country condition assessment, cultural burning, cultural food sources, myerlee/golden kelp forest monitoring, seasonal cultural calendars, climate impacts and coastal wetland values. Outputs will support MTWAC’s strategic priorities to manage culture and heritage, strengthen the Tebrakunna Ranger Program, build community capacity and employment pathways, and progress aspirations for a future Indigenous Protected Area over Tebrakunna land and sea Country. The project will provide a stronger knowledge base for monitoring and improving the health of Country and people through MTWAC-led governance and planning. Outputs • Report characterising Coastal Country, including threats and opportunities assessment [written] • Co-designed wellbeing framework, methods and tools [written] • Final project report [written]
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This record provides an overview of the NESP Marine and Coastal Hub Research Plan 2024 project "Unbroken whispers: the ripples connecting sea kin". For specific data outputs from this project, please see child records associated with this metadata. -------------------- Whales and dolphins are culturally significant species for many Aboriginal nations, particularly in south-eastern Australia, with relationships expressed through song, dance, rock art, stories and contemporary artworks. Indigenous ecological knowledge can provide important understanding of species relationships, migration, ecological change and responsibilities to Sea Country, but has not traditionally been considered in the protection and recovery of EPBC-listed threatened and migratory whales and dolphins. This Indigenous-led project will identify, document and share, where culturally appropriate, Indigenous knowledge and cultural connections relating to southern right whales, humpback whales, orca and dolphins. The project will explore relationships between land, sea and sky, and cultural responsibilities connected to kinship, species recovery and Sea Country governance. Project activities will include establishment of an Indigenous Cultural Connections Reference Group to provide cultural and spiritual leadership; a desktop review of anthropological records, oral histories and language; and co-designed on-Country gatherings following the annual whale migration pathway from K’gari to Lunawanna-allonah and Encounter Bay. Gatherings will include yarning circles, artistic workshops and on-Country learning. Outputs will include culturally appropriate knowledge-sharing products such as artworks, written stories, images, video and a technical report. The project will support Indigenous communities and organisations to strengthen cultural governance of Sea Country, share intergenerational knowledge, and identify opportunities for Indigenous knowledge to inform policy, recovery planning and conservation management for threatened and migratory whales and dolphins. Outputs • Short project videos • Final project report [written]
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