The Wilderness Society South Australia in Adelaide, South Australia | Non-governmental organisation (NGO)
The Wilderness Society South Australia
Locality: Adelaide, South Australia
Address: Level 7 / 118 King William Street 5000 Adelaide, SA, Australia
Website: http://www.wilderness.org.au
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24.01.2022 Australia has been facing the loss of its natural places for a very long time. Last summer’s bushfires should act as a big wake up call. WATCH Wild Australia: After The Fires TONIGHT 8.30PM AEST Australia has the opportunity to no longer be the extinction nation. ... We can work not just towards bushfire recovery, but environmental health, so that we can lessen the shocks of this kind of event happening again.
23.01.2022 Article in The Weekend Australian Magazine today, well worth a read and saving a copy! The Great Australian Bight has been spared - for now. But can this pristine wilderness hold out forever against the hunger for its resources? #FightForTheBight
23.01.2022 The South Australian Government has just released its plan to cut back some of our most precious marine sanctuaries, including in the Great Australian Bight and off Kangaroo Islandputting our unique marine life, tourism businesses and local communities at risk! With the support of thousands of people like you, we kicked Equinor, BP and Chevron out from the Great Australian Bight. And together, we can use that momentum to save our South Aussie sanctuaries. Right now, the Government is asking for your feedbacksend a message today http://wilderness.org.au//SA_sanctuaries Video: Ocean Imaging
23.01.2022 The worlds largest living animal has been spotted off the coast of Sydney! Sean says he was speechless after capturing vision of a blue whale off Maroubra t...his week. The species is said to have only been sighted twice off the coast of Sydney in over a decade. IG: seansperception
22.01.2022 For six years, South Australias marine sanctuaries have been providing protection for all kinds of unique marine life. But now they're on the chopping block! Send a message to the SA Government asking them to not cut back these precious sanctuaries...... http://wilderness.org.au/SA_sanctuaries Right now, the Government is asking for your feedback. With the support of thousands of people like you, we kicked Equinor, BP and Chevron out from the Great Australian Bight. And together, we can use that momentum to save our South Aussie sanctuaries. South Australia's marine sanctuaries are globally significant. They provide a critical refuge for the sea lions of St Francis Isles in the Great Australian Bight. They protect the little penguins and seals of the Neptune Islands in between Eyre and York Peninsulas, the important fish habitat of the Clinton Wetlands at the top of Gulf St Vincent, and the waters off the tourism icon Kangaroo Islandstill reeling from the bushfire disaster. Please write to the Government today! http://wilderness.org.au/SA_sanctuaries
22.01.2022 Australia's first feather map has revealed that the Murray-Darling Basin is vital to ensuring the heath of waterbirds around the country. It is critical that the amount of water currently being taken by industry is reduced and major investments are made in habitat restoration and re-vegetation. Australia has international obligations to protect Ramsar listed wetlands like the Lower Murray Lakes and Coorong.
22.01.2022 Dive into the amazing insect world with Dr Thomas Sayers and his amazing photographs that bring this secret kingdom to life! wilderness.org.au/secret-king...dom The loss of some of our smallest creatures may have the biggest of impacts. Protecting nature is not only for the charismatic species. It's for all that call this planet home, including us.
22.01.2022 "The court was absolutely still as Justice Dean began with "my answers are", a slight pause, then "yes". That was all we needed to know." On this day in 1983, the Franklin River was saved by a decision that defined a generation. The fight to save the Franklin is one of the most significant environmental campaigns in Australian history & it is where the Wilderness Society started. ... So many people were involved with the movement. Over 1,000 people were arrested in the months-long Franklin blockade, and many more travelled from all over Australia to take part in the protests. Today we'd like to thank each and every one of you. This landmark case confirmed the Federal Governments power to intervene and protect sites listed as World Heritage. Many of you are still part of the movement today - helping to win fights against the odds to secure a better future for nature and all of us. We are grateful for your passion and continuing support. Learn more about the Franklin and other campaigns won against the odds wilderness.org.au/won-against-the-odds This article was published in Tasmanian Wilderness Society newsletter, Wilderness News in July 1983.
21.01.2022 The Murray-Darling Basin Ministerial Council recently met to review progress with the Murray-Darling Basin Plan. "While the rivers are dying in front of our eyes, they are being asked to buy their own water back. It is a tragedy that we have a duty to make right. Instead of viewing the river as a commodity, we need to recognise the river has an intrinsic right to live."
20.01.2022 "Just to see everybody come together from surfers to all kinds of people, coming to this fight to save the ocean and to save all the marine life - I had tears in my eyes"Bunna Lawrie, Mirning Senior Elder & Songman The Mirning People were a driving force behind the Fight For The Bight Alliance. Tens of thousands of people protested against Norwegian oil giant Equinor's drilling plans in Australia and hundreds in Oslo. It is thanks to tremendous demonstrations of opposition l...ike this that on 25 February Equinor withdrew its plans to drill in the Great Australian Bight. Read more wilderness.org.au/GreatAustralianBight Happy #NAIDOCWeek2020
20.01.2022 For almost all of human history, the atmospheric concentration of carbon dioxide stuck at about two hundred and seventy-five parts per million, meaning that the planets energy balance was essentially unchanged. The physical world worked in predictable ways. But theres around twenty-five parts per million more CO2 in the air now than there was a decade ago: Thats more change in ten years than over all the millennia from the invention of agriculture to the start of the Industrial Revolution. To think about it this way is to understand why this is a bigger predicament than any weve ever faced. The expansion of the fossil fuel industry must stop, together we can...
19.01.2022 "As for the argument that "green tape" - the derogatory term ideologues use to describe environmental protections - has gone too far, we need look no further than the devastating decision recently taken by mining company Rio Tinto to destroy a cultural site in Western Australia which contained artefacts recording more than 45 millennia of human history." Ben Oquist
17.01.2022 How can taking deforestation off the menu reduce our climate impact? Tune into #FightForPlanetA tomorrow night at 8.30 PM as Jess Panegyres joins Craig Reucassel to see the immediate impacts of deforestation. https://ab.co/FightForPlanetA #FightForPlanetA @ABCTV
16.01.2022 "The Coalition government’s federal budget allocated A$233.4 million to six Commonwealth-run national parks but most will be spent on tourism infrastructure upgrades. What’s needed is more staff and equipment to restore, enrich and maintain natural ecosystems, and to secure our most iconic natural places."
16.01.2022 The Great Australian Bight is full of wondrous creatures! These sightings of elusive bigfin squid double the known records in the southern hemisphere! This is why the community took on the #fightforthebight against big-oil. This wilderness needs to be permanently protected.
15.01.2022 South Australias marine sanctuaries only make up 5% of our states waters and provide critical protection to all kinds of incredible marine life, most of which is found nowhere else on Earth. All these sanctuaries are now on the chopping block. Please send a message to SA Bests Bonaros and Pangallo to save our sanctuaries. https://www.wilderness.org.au/sanctuary Much needed protection is provided by these sanctuaries including a critical haven for the sea lions of St Fran...cis Isles in the Great Australian Bight; protection of the little penguins and seals of the Neptune Islands in between Eyre and Yorke Peninsulas; nurseries for the fish at the unique Clinton Wetlands across the top of Gulf St Vincent; and the protection of important breeding grounds for sea lions and marine life off the iconic Kangaroo Islandstill reeling from the recent bushfire disaster. Protecting these sanctuaries now rests in the hands of just a few Members of the ParliamentMLCs Connie Bonaros and Frank Pangallo. These two upper house members could hold the deciding vote and need to hear from you. Image: Ron and Valerie Taylor
14.01.2022 Government's must act in the interests of the people they were elected to govern for. Unless the expansion of the fossil fuel industry is stopped, we have little chance of providing our children with a liveable climate.
14.01.2022 If we are serious about reducing the impacts of climate change, the expansion of the fossil fuel industry must stop. Australia is now the world's third-biggest exporter of fossil fuel emissions, behind only Russia and Saudi Arabia.
13.01.2022 Not just blue but UV too! Most lizards have a pink tongue, but the blue hue of Australia's famous blue-tongue lizards likely evolved as a protection against pre...dators. The base of their tongue is particularly bright under UV light which birds can see clearly. The lizard relies on camouflage to avoid hawks and other predators. When that fails, the lizards poke out their tongues as far as possible distracting the birds with a flash of bright blue and ultraviolet tongues. And yes, you would see the bright tongue under disco lights! Blue tongue lizards have a highly conspicuous tongue, but unlike many other kinds of lizards, its a big tonguethe surface area is large. When blue tongues do a full tongue display, the mouth is opened widely and the tongue is flattened and expanded. At the same time, they may hiss and puff-up their body for maximum effect. This behaviour, in combination with a highly conspicuous tongue, can be quite intimidating for anyone that has got too close to a wild bluey, explains Ass. Professor Martin Whiting from Macquarie University. Happy #WorldLizardDay!!
13.01.2022 Happy National Tree Day. This majestic river red gum from Wilmington in the Southern Flinders Ranges, S.A. is reportedly over 14m in circumference! What a reminder of nature's grandeur. ... Do you have an inspiring tree story? Share it with us! Read personal stories about how trees have shaped our lives wilderness.org.au/inspiring_trees Aaron Poole via Field Naturalists Club of Victoria
13.01.2022 BREAKING NEWS: The Morrison Government is proposing to immediately hand environmental protections to the states without first fixing the fundamental problems in Australias environment law and before strong safeguards are in place for species and wildlife. Learn more wilderness.org.au/EPBC-Act-review The Independent Review of Australia's environment laws released today confirmed that our environment is under increasing threat and that the community doesn't trust the EPBC Ac...t to deliver effective protection. Australians need to have confidence that our environment laws will deal with major drivers of extinction like deforestation, build resilience in the face of climate change & protect our globally important wildlife. We need a genuine & reasonable process that will deliver real environmental outcomes by ending the extinction & deforestation crises. But this shouldn't be preempted & undercut by any efforts to devolve responsibilities to the states without fixing the EPBC Act's core problems.
13.01.2022 For decades David Attenborough has delighted with tales of life on Earth. But now the broadcaster wants us to face up to the state of the planet. His latest film, accompanied by the drum beat of human population growth and the loss of wilderness areas is a call to action. We are facing a crisis. One that has consequences for us all. It threatens our ability to feed ourselves, to control our climate. It even puts us at greater risk of pandemic diseases such as Covid-19, he w...arns. David Attenborough: A Life On Our Planet will premiere in cinemas on 28 September.
12.01.2022 Sir David Attenborough is leading a call from conservation groups for the world to invest $A700 billion a year to halt the destruction of nature. His latest film documents the dangers posed by climate change and the extinction of species, issued the call as the United Nations convened a one-day summit aimed at galvanising action to protect wildlife. Our natural world is under greater pressure now than at any time in human history, and the future of the entire planet on whi...ch every single one of us depends is in grave jeopardy, Sir David, 94, said in a statement. We still have an opportunity to reverse catastrophic biodiversity loss, but time is running out.
12.01.2022 It's time to protect the Great Australian Bight for good!
12.01.2022 In the most comprehensive report to date on the economic implications of protecting nature, over 100 economists and scientists find that the global economy would benefit from the establishment of far more protected areas on land and at sea than exist today. The report considers various scenarios of protecting at least 30% of the worlds land and ocean to find that the benefits outweigh the costs by a ratio of at least 5-to-1.
12.01.2022 Today the Morrison Government is pushing a rehashed version of Abbotts anti-environment bill which will weaken laws now, with promises of environmental improvements 'later'. A rehash of Abbott's one-stop-shop, giving all approvals to the states, may mean more wildlife lost & the places we love destroyed. This bill risks locking in the loss of iconic species like the koala or the Greater Glider. Both used to be widespread across the east coast, but are being pushed to extinct...ion by years of habitat destruction & the most destructive bushfires on record. The Morrison Government isnt hearing our scientists, looking at the evidence or listening to community concerns. We need: Laws that will protect numbats, koalas and dugongs. Safeguards that will stop the destruction of forests, rivers and oceans. Laws to protect icons like the Great Barrier Reef, Tasmania's old-growth forests, Great Australian Bight and Ningaloo. Will you email your Senator and ask them to stand up for nature and the laws we need to safeguard our precious species and iconic natural places? wilderness.org.au/EPBC_email_senators We cant let the government push this bill for extinction through!
10.01.2022 Midnight Oil's first new song in 18 years will be broadcast worldwide as part of the National Indigenous Music Awards this Saturday from 7pm. Gadigal Land, named for the traditional owners of a large swath of Sydney, features Mirning Elder Bunna Lawrie. Bunna and the Mirning have been at the forefront of fighting to stop oil-drilling in the Great Australian Bight, to protect it for good. Now is the time to support the Mirning Elders in their bid to have their traditional cu...stodianship of Mirning Sea Country recognised. Please donate and be a Caretaker for the Great Australian Bight! https://mirning.grassrootz.com/caretakers-for-the-great-aus #fightforthebight
10.01.2022 Water buybacks are critical if we are to have any chance of restoring Australias most important river system, the Murray Darling Basin, to health!
09.01.2022 "There is currently no regulation preventing motorised vessels travelling at speed through the whales calving and nursery area in Encounter Bay." "Whale mothers and their inexperienced calves are particularly vulnerable to vessel strike. The whales need a motorised vessel-free nursery area where mothers and calves are free from disturbances." "Where the mothers can rest and be at ease to feed and raise their young and prepare them for the long migration back to sub-Antarctic ...waters at the end of the season." Encounter Whales spokesperson Elizabeth Steele-Collins
09.01.2022 The constant push to expand the fossil fuel industry is not supported by the Australian community and is simply not viable if we are to have any chance of a liveable climate into the future.
08.01.2022 The South Australian Government has proposed to allow commercial fishing into some of the state's most important marine sanctuaries, at odds with its own independent review, the science and community views. Recent YouGov polling found that 88% of South Australians think marine sanctuaries are a good idea and three in four people want to see them doubled in size. Please Premier - SOS - save our sanctuaries!
08.01.2022 Real action on climate change means we must stop the expansion of the fossil fuel industry!
08.01.2022 Worst-case global heating scenarios may need to be revised upwards in light of a better understanding of the role of clouds, scientists have said. "The more we learn, the more fragile the Earth system seems to be and the faster we need to move. It gives even stronger argument to step out of this Covid-19 crisis and move full speed towards decarbonising the economy. We need to stop the expansion of the fossil fuel (coal, oil & gas) industry!
07.01.2022 Australia is home to some amazing creatures and fascinating stories about them! Join us LIVE as we celebrate the first-ever Nature Book Week with stories of close up encounters with our endangered animals and the books that inspire us to protect them!
05.01.2022 Claims that major developments are being regularly held up because of legal challenges to environmental approvals have been dismissed in new research. It is important not to further limit access to justice for public interest litigation in an era where across the world, the rule of law is being tested not by citizens engaged in lawfare but by the accrual of executive government power." Lee Godden - director of Melbourne Universitys centre for resources, energy and environmental law.
04.01.2022 There is growing recognition of the value of cultural burning used by Indigenous Australians, the bushfires royal commission has been told. Indigenous Australians have used fire to shape and manage the land for more than 60,000 years, senior counsel assisting the commission Dominique Hogan-Doran SC said this week. "While these practices have been widely disrupted over a number of generations, the evidence will show that there is a growing recognition of the value of cultural burning."
03.01.2022 AMAZING! Scroll around & experience what it's like to have a Giant Australian Cuttlefish swim over your head! Wintertime along the Great Southern Reef means Giant Australian Cuttlefish at the head of the Spencer Gulf are gathering in large numbers to mate and lay eggs. Larger males outnumber the females by up to 11:1 at times throughout the breeding season, which lasts around 3 months. ... It's moments like these that remind us why we are fighting so hard to protect the Great Australian Bight for good! Thanks Great Southern Reef for this amazing video
03.01.2022 Where the Nullarbor Wilderness Protection Area meets the Great Australian Bight Marine Park - what an inspiring place!
02.01.2022 Continuing to expand the fossil fuel industry is not an option if we are to have any chance of a liveable climate into the future.
02.01.2022 Whale experts from both Victoria and South Australia hold grave concerns for the welfare of a southern right whale mother and calf after suffering numerous incidents of disturbance by boats. "This can't continue... something needs to be done. This needs to change." Spokesperson for Encounter Whales, Elizabeth Steele-Collins.
01.01.2022 This full page plea is from South Australia's Sunday Mail yesterday. Please Premier Marshall - save SA's marine sanctuaries!
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