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What Did the Cameras See? | Wild Neighbours Project – Quolls, Gliders & Hidden Wildlife
What is living alongside us after dark in the Southern Highlands?
In this Wild Neighbours webinar recording, Dr Katarina Mikac and Aiden Clifton share what wildlife cameras revealed across the Robertson, Kangaloon and Illawarra Escarpment corridor.
Working with local landholders, the Wild Neighbours Project used ground-based camera traps and arboreal tree cameras to better understand how native wildlife persists and moves through private land, farmland and connected forest habitat.
See footage and hear insights about:
• spotted-tailed quolls
• sugar gliders and feathertail gliders
• antechinus and other small native mammals
• the role of private land in protecting wildlife corridors
• why habitat connectivity matters for threatened species in the Southern Highlands
The project highlights the remarkable wildlife living close to us — often unseen — and the importance of protecting and enhancing connected habitat across the Thin Green Line and wider Illawarra Escarpment corridor.
Presented by Dr Katarina Mikac and Aiden Clifton, University of Wollongong.
Wild Neighbours is a collaborative biodiversity monitoring project involving local landholders and conservation partners in the Southern Highlands.
Subscribe to WinZero for more local conversations about climate, nature, wildlife habitat and practical community action.
This Wild Neighbours Project is funded by the Australian Government Natural Heritage Trust and delivered for Local Land Services, a member of the Commonwealth Regional Delivery Partners panel.
#WildNeighbours #SpottedTailedQuoll #SouthernHighlands #WildlifeConservation #HabitatCorridors #Biodiversity
#DCCEEW #NativeSpecies #SaveNativeSpecies #Conservation.
Видео What Did the Cameras See? | Wild Neighbours Project – Quolls, Gliders & Hidden Wildlife канала WinZero Wingecarribee
In this Wild Neighbours webinar recording, Dr Katarina Mikac and Aiden Clifton share what wildlife cameras revealed across the Robertson, Kangaloon and Illawarra Escarpment corridor.
Working with local landholders, the Wild Neighbours Project used ground-based camera traps and arboreal tree cameras to better understand how native wildlife persists and moves through private land, farmland and connected forest habitat.
See footage and hear insights about:
• spotted-tailed quolls
• sugar gliders and feathertail gliders
• antechinus and other small native mammals
• the role of private land in protecting wildlife corridors
• why habitat connectivity matters for threatened species in the Southern Highlands
The project highlights the remarkable wildlife living close to us — often unseen — and the importance of protecting and enhancing connected habitat across the Thin Green Line and wider Illawarra Escarpment corridor.
Presented by Dr Katarina Mikac and Aiden Clifton, University of Wollongong.
Wild Neighbours is a collaborative biodiversity monitoring project involving local landholders and conservation partners in the Southern Highlands.
Subscribe to WinZero for more local conversations about climate, nature, wildlife habitat and practical community action.
This Wild Neighbours Project is funded by the Australian Government Natural Heritage Trust and delivered for Local Land Services, a member of the Commonwealth Regional Delivery Partners panel.
#WildNeighbours #SpottedTailedQuoll #SouthernHighlands #WildlifeConservation #HabitatCorridors #Biodiversity
#DCCEEW #NativeSpecies #SaveNativeSpecies #Conservation.
Видео What Did the Cameras See? | Wild Neighbours Project – Quolls, Gliders & Hidden Wildlife канала WinZero Wingecarribee
Wild Neighbours What Did the Cameras See Wild Neighbours Project Dr Katarina Mikac Aiden Clifton University of Wollongong Southern Highlands wildlife Robertson wildlife Illawarra Escarpment wildlife Thin Green Line spotted tail quoll quoll conservation gliding possums sugar glider feathertail glider antechinus forest connectivity native animals Australia WinZero Robertson Environment Protection Society southern highlands landcare network southern highlands
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