Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/11017/2906

Mulgrave-Russell basin assessment: wet tropics natural resource management region


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Title: Mulgrave-Russell basin assessment: wet tropics natural resource management region
Authors: Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority
ASFA Subjects: River basins
Coastal zone management
Catchment area
APAIS Subject: Coasts
Rivers
Location: Cairns/Cooktown Management Area
Category: Ecosystems
Processes
Geographic features
World heritage
Agriculture
Coastal development
Mining
Leading environmental practice
Water quality
Coastal communities
Councils
Farmers and graziers
Miners
Issue Date: 2013
Publisher: Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority
Abstract: A healthy and resilient Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area (the World Heritage Area) is reliant upon the ecological integrity of the adjacent Great Barrier Reef catchment and its coastal ecosystems. The Mulgrave-Russell basin provides habitat for many important marine, estuarine, freshwater and terrestrial species with lifecycles that have connections to the World Heritage Area. The coastal ecosystems in the basin also provide a range of ecological functions that support the health and resilience of the marine environment. Within the marine environment, coastal waters provide high value marine areas including around islands and inshore coral reefs. To protect representations of these areas, there are many coastal and inshore Marine National Park Zones adjacent to this basin. This Report is part of a series of similar reports investigating the nature, condition, connectivity and management of coastal ecosystems within basins that form the catchment of the World Heritage Area. The purpose of this Report on the Mulgrave-Russell basin is to: • Review coastal ecosystems in the basin, assess their state and consider the pressures that they are facing now, and into the future. • Understand the connections between coastal ecosystems and the World Heritage Area, and how changes to these connections are impacting on the ecological functions they provide to the Great Barrier Reef. • Empower communities and stakeholders by providing information that can support on-ground actions.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11017/2906
Type of document: Report
Appears in Collections:Effects

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