Our Partners
BHP
Since 2009, Earthwatch has worked with BHP, the Australian Government through Parks Australia and the Australian Biological Resources Study to deliver Australia’s largest nature discovery project, involving specialist taxonomists, indigenous communities, rangers and landowners, teachers, students and BHP employees.
Bush Blitz aims to document Australia’s biodiversity, as understanding biodiversity is fundamental to conserving it. The program also connects communities, landowners, teachers, students, BHP employees...
Impact Report 2022
Impact Report
2022
2022 marked another year of important environmental action to restore our iconic landscapes, protect our biodiverse ecosystems and prioritise climate action. In our 40th year, we have continued to deliver scientific programs across the country at pace, and have even begun to extend our work globally through critical UN discussions around climate change and biodiversity loss. In the 2022 Impact report, we have collected case studies, highlights and key results from the year to share with our valued community and supporters....
Impact Report 2020-2021
Impact Report
2020-2021
2020 and 2021 represent a tumultuous time for society and the environment. The pandemic has upended our ways of working and living, and extreme weather events bring us daily reminders that we are already living with the consequences of a warming planet.
However, Earthwatch has not slowed down its mission to empower people to save the natural world. In the past two years, we have:
Hosted over 6,000 participants in our programs and expeditions,
Enabled participants, Fellows and workshop attendees contribute...
Bush Blitz RV Investigator
Bush Blitz RV Investigator
We’re inviting schools to live stream marine scientists this October!
(The CSIRO research vessel (RV) Investigator. Source: Tauri Minogue / CSIRO)
In October 2022, Bush Blitz is spending 45 days on Research Vessel Investigator, mapping and sampling the underwater seamounts of Australia’s Indian Ocean Territory around Cocos (Keeling) Island. We want to share it with your classroom!
Are you a primary or secondary school teacher?
Would you like your class to meet scientists who research what lives in the...
Research Publications
Research
2022
Articles
Soltani, N.S., Taylor, M.P., Wilson, S.P. International quantification of microplastics in indoor dust: prevalence, exposure and risk assessment. Environmental Pollution.
Read here
Garcia-Rojas, M.I., Keatley, M.R., Roslan, N. Citizen science and expert opinion working together to understand the impacts of climate change. Plos One.
Read here
Duke, N.C., Mackenzie, J.R., Canning, A.D., Hutley, L.B., Bourke, A.J., Kovacs, J.M., Cormier, R., Staben, G., Lymburner, L., Ai, E. ENSO-driven extreme oscillations in mean sea level destabilise...
Turning the Tide on Plastic Pollution in Bali
Turning the Tide on Plastic Pollution in Bali
Plastic Collective and Earthwatch are working with local NGO Sea Communities and a village-owned enterprise BUMDes Sari Lestari, installing two small portable recycling machines to kick-start a new circular economy in Les Village, a remote fishing village on Bali’s northern coast.
Plastic waste is a social and environmental problem faced the world over. This partnership is enabling the community to tackle this issue from both sides, creating a real chance of successfully improving the marine debris issue...
Wetlands Education Resources
Wetlands Education Resources
Earthwatch Australia Education Series
With support from the partnership between the Australian Government's Reef Trust and the Great Barrier Reef Foundation, we have developed a suite of training videos.
These videos showcase MangroveWatch research methodology for citizen science monitoring of mangroves and tidal wetlands. The method in these videos is developed by Dr Norm Duke and Jock Mackenzie with MangroveWatch Ltd., and presented by Holloways Beach Education Centre.
These videos complement Earthwatch Australia's mangrove...
Protecting Wetlands for the Future
Protecting Wetlands for the Future
Why protect Tidal Wetlands?
Rich in biodiversity, wetlands provide habitat for rare bird and reptile species, drawing tourism dollars from around the world. Wetlands provide habitat and nursery grounds to countless species of commercially important fish, both for tourism and fisheries.
Furthermore, wetlands act like kidneys of the Earth, trapping sediment and pollutants running off from the land, playing a significant role in protecting seagrass beds and reefs from nutrient overloads.
Wetlands also protect shoreline...
TeachLive Expeditions
TeachLive Past Expeditions
Protecting the Reef’s Coastal Frontier | Oct & Nov 2019
Four teachers travelled to Mackay in Queensland for a week of research in the mangroves.
Here they acted as research assistants, exploring the mangroves fringing the Pioneer river, and assessing the condition of the ecosystem by conducting surveys, filming the shoreline, measuring trees and conducting field biomass assessments.
Read more
Bush Blitz Little Desert National Park | Oct 2019
Five teachers from around Australia...