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'Hope for Ninu' wins Impact Award at Wildlife Photographer of the Year

Past intern and photographer, Jannico Kelk wins the Impact Award at the Natural History Museum’s 2024 Wildlife Photographer of the Year with his bilby photograph.

Arid Recovery explores Finniss Springs with Arabana Rangers
Arid Recovery returns to Finniss Springs to help the Arabana Rangers track down wildlife
Welcome dump of rain this month breaks the drying trend
Arid Recovery Reserve has experienced a welcomed July rainfall, transforming the arid lands into a wet and muddy landscape. This wet spell gives wildlife a much-needed reprieve from the dry conditions.
The quest to keep quolls out of the quoll-free control paddock

A western quoll managed to infiltrate Arid Recovery's Main Exclosure, a paddock designated as a control free of quolls. Discover how our team caught up with him, found out how he was getting in, and sent him on his way.

Kowari conservation in action

Discover the adorable kowari, an endangered carnivorous marsupial facing extinction  Join us at Arid Recovery withd PhD student, Molly Barlow, as we monitor, study, and protect kowaris in the rain and shine.

Thylation grant gets more Felixers
Controlling feral animals is a big job that requires a lot of time and effort. Best results are only achieved when you use all the tools at your disposal, and at Arid Recovery the Felixer is one of those tools. Thanks to funding from Thylation, & the Invasive Species Council, Arid Recovery has extra Felixers helping protect the newly reintroduced population of kowaris from feral cats.
Biggest rain in a decade
During the middle of January, we had 119mm of rain which is 75% of our annual average…. in a week! Some of it fell very heavily in intense and spectacular storm fronts. Nathan (Conservation Land Management Officer) and myself,  stationed themselves out at the reserve to respond to the event and check the fences. Leanne (UNSW researcher) and three students were out there as well. It has been 11 years since the last comparable rain event and the single biggest dump in the reserve’s 24-year history.
Leading the charge: testing small electric 4WD for outback conservation work
Electric vehicles could become an important tool for working in the bush, whether for wildlife conservation, tourism or primary production. To trial them, we commissioned an EV mechanic to customise an old Suzuki EVNorth.
Wildlife get a fighting chance against feral cats in two Eureka Prize hopefuls
Science is giving native wildlife a fighting chance against feral cats with two research programs at Arid Recovery named today as finalists for the 2020 Eureka Awards, the ‘Oscars’ of Australian Science. Arid Recovery’s research program is punching above its weight in being named two of three finalists in the Applied Environmental Research category.
Rain and Hope

After waiting through an achingly long 24 months of drought, solid rain fell this weekend – 50 mm of the glorious stuff.Our very first task is to check the fence. In a landscape where rain is so infrequent, and especially with less vegetation covering the ground at the moment, when water does move it can flow really fast and erode washouts under the fence. 

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