
ACF and UNSW are inviting people across eastern Australia to take part in the Platy-project – a citizen science initiative to better understand and protect one of our most unique animals.
Platypus are shy, egg-laying mammals that spend much of their lives hidden beneath the water. Because they’re so elusive, scientists still don’t have a clear picture of where they live. That’s where you come in.
Your observations – whether you see a platypus or not – help fill these data gaps. Together, we’re building the most comprehensive picture yet of platypus populations, which will inform conservation and habitat protection for years to come.
https://www.acf.org.au/get-involved/the-platy-project/platy-project-signup
In what is thought to be an Australian first, a portable PIT (Passive Integrated Transponder) reader has been installed in Adjungbilly Creek to help scientists track the movements of the endangered Macquarie Perch.
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We lacked information on the aquatic wildlife of the Upper Billabong catchment, so using Citizen Science - the Refreshing Rivers iNaturalist project and eDNA tests, we have gathered 1,672 observations across the catchment and also completed 9 eDNA profiles in local waterways.
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Courtesy of the Refreshing Upper Billabong project, we have a limited number of tubestock suitable for planting both instream and along creek banks to reduce erosion and create habitat.
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Website developed by the Australian River Restoration Centre