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An aerial view of Gayini land showing the difference between a return to natural flooding cycles on the left, and the scars left by destructive development on the right. Photo: UNSW Sydney/Richard Freeman

Gayini: where science meets traditional knowledge in restoring former cotton country

UNSW Sydney

A view of the Murrumbidgee River where UNSW researchers study how flooding and grazing shape surrounding ecosystems. Picture: UNSW Sydney/Richard Freeman
A view of the Murrumbidgee River where UNSW researchers study how flooding and grazing shape surrounding ecosystems. Picture: UNSW Sydney/Richard Freeman

Traditional Owners, UNSW scientists, government and conservation groups join forces to get Gayini wetlands thriving again.

Gayini – meaning “water” in the Nari Nari language – is part of 80,000 hectares of culturally and ecologically rich land in south-west NSW, owned and managed by the Nari Nari Tribal Councilan Aboriginal-led not-for-profit organisation.

Conservation scientists from UNSW Sydney’s Centre for Ecosystem Science – supported by Charles Sturt University, Commonwealth Environmental Water Holder, The Nature Conservancy, the Murray Darling Wetlands Working Group, and the NSW Biodiversity Conservation Trust – are working with the Nari Nari Tribal Council to measure how this landscape can recover after more than two centuries of land and water exploitation – practices that have led to ecosystem degradation, the spread of invasive species, and the decline or extinction of native flora and fauna.

“By restoring natural flooding regimes and managing livestock grazing, our collaboration with the Nari Nari Tribal Council is a study of how Country responds when it's given a new lease on life,” says UNSW's Professor Richard Kingsford.

For more on Gayini, including striking aerial imagery and on-Country insights from Traditional Owners and scientists, visit UNSW’s interactive feature at: https://news.unsw.edu.au/en/gayini-healing-country-supported-by-science


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Lachlan Gilbert

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Images

riverGlassy_SH01-1919.jpg

A view of the Murrumbidgee River where UNSW researchers study how flooding and grazing shape surrounding ecosystems. Picture: UNSW Sydney/Richard Freeman
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