Land Use and grazing

Primary production or ‘growing grass’ in the rangelands can be complex, so an interdisciplinary approach is required, acknowledging everything is connected. ‘Good practice’ grazing in rangeland systems can help bolster native pastures and improve production, stabilise and enhance land condition, reduce degradation and run-off, offer drought resistance whilst also generating substantial economic returns.

ESRMs and rehydration

ESRM planning is used to underlie the sustainable pastoralism work that Rangelands NRM undertakes.

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Improved fire regimes

The project is underway across the area of the Dampier Peninsula and the Northern Pilbara.

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Rangelands Self Herding

The Rangelands Self Herding (RSH) project worked with pastoralists to provide them with a suite of tools to influence herd behaviour in order to change grazing distributions to suit a station’s needs.

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Pilbara Corridors

The Fortescue River catchment in Western Australia’s Pilbara region is the focus of this six-year project to protect and improve existing native vegetation and manage threats to biodiversity.

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Smart Farms – Revitalising the Southern Rangelands – Hillview Station

This case study is based on the Smart Farms Project Revitalising the Southern Rangelands and the pastoral industry through advanced and refined grazing management project. Here we explore the outcomes of exploring and implementing new technology and techniques at Hillview station, a regenrative pastoral station working to adapt to the continual pressures of drought and other climate pressures.

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Glenflorrie Biodiversity Survey

Biodiversity is and always will be an important component in any pastoral business. A healthy and ecologically balanced ecosystem provides the means for productivity, profitability. Now in the forefront of the global agenda; the need for biodiversity surveys to be undertaken is dramatically increasing.

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