Skip to main content
Start of main content

RIEL seminar series

PhD reports

Presenter Taegan Calnan and Acacio da Costa Guterres
Date
Time
to
Contact person E: riel.outreach@cdu.edu.au
Location CDU Casuarina campus Yellow 1.1.39 and online
Zoom: https://charlesdarwinuni.zoom.us/j/89230337667
Open to Public

Ground-level governance of Arnhem Land Fire Abatement savanna burning projects: fire for the future, presented by Taegan Calnan.

Taegan Calnan face with leafy vegetation in background

Based on an analysis of interviews with leaders from four organisations operating savanna fire management projects in Arnhem Land, this presentation will explore what project outcomes drive engagement with the projects, what barriers exist to these outcomes, and what the future priorities are for project outcomes.

The value of the project outcomes is affected by relationships between landowners and ranger groups and relationships within the two-way knowledge sites across the multilevel governance of the projects. Present and potential governance arrangements that support these pivotal relationships are discussed.

Taegan Calnan is an environmental scientist who has worked in natural resource management across northern Australia for the past two decades. She has a strong interest in supporting the Indigenous Land and Sea Management movement that aims to maintain and practice Aboriginal ecological knowledge, improve landscape health, and promote viable livelihoods in remote areas of Australia.

Since 2018, Taegan has been a PhD candidate at Charles Darwin University, researching the governance of Aboriginal-owned savanna fire management carbon abatement projects in Arnhem Land, Northern Territory, Australia.

Impact of fortified biochar on sustainable food crop production and income generation in a vegetable-rice cropping sequence in Timor-Leste, presented by Acacio da Costa Guterres.

Acacio da Costa Guterres from waist up, wearing blue shirt with CDU and RIEL logos, with leaves in the background

Acacio da Costa Guterres is an agronomist with a research practice that includes soil management, agronomy, weed management, food security, postharvest management, agricultural and livelihood applications. He is a Senior Lecturer and Researcher at the Faculty of Agriculture, National University of Timor Lorosa’e in Timor-Leste.

Acacio has also served as the head of the Department of Agronomy (2001-2005; 2016-2020) and deputy manager of the National Scientific Investigation and Research Centre (2010-2012), and has led or been a team member on research projects funded by ACIAR, FAO, IFAD and the Government of Timor-Leste.

His PhD at Charles Darwin University (2020-2024) investigates the impact of fortified rice husk biochar on yields and profitability in a vegetable-rice cropping sequence in Timor-Leste.

Related Events

  • Person wearing Philippine Eagle Foundation shirt, holding an eagle, against a background of a forest canopy. The eagle is wearing a leather hood.
    Casuarina campus

    'Culture-based conservation' approach to supporting governance of Indigenous territories

    Indigenous Peoples are crucial for the long-term persistence of the Earth’s biodiversity and ecosystem services. In the Philippines, the Indigenous Peoples Rights Act of 1998 protects Indigenous rights to own and manage territories. The forests of Indigenous territories are habitats of the Philippine eagle – a forest eagle that is endemic to the Philippines where it is a national bird and an apex forest predator.

    Seminar/lecture/forum
    Read more about 'Culture-based conservation' approach to supporting governance of Indigenous territories
  • Lindsay Hutley, head to waist, wearing a blue shirt, with trees and shrubs in the background
    Casuarina campus

    Carbon and water adventures in north Australia

    With climate change and increasing land use pressures there is more and more demand for knowledge of carbon dynamics and water use as well as water resource management. Lindsay’s research is focused on providing better understanding of the biophysical environment of tropical land and water systems.

    Seminar/lecture/forum
    Read more about Carbon and water adventures in north Australia
  • Sunil Kadri, leaning on the edge of a large circular tank almost full of water, with large fishes swimming in it.
    Casuarina campus

    From CCTV to AI

    Fish farms have historically been a black box in terms of understanding the behavioural needs and preferences of the fish within them, as the only chance to assess what they are up to is when they break the surface. Sunil has been monitoring fish behaviour below the surface of farms for 35 years.

    Seminar/lecture/forum
    Read more about From CCTV to AI
Back to top