TY - JOUR
T1 - From conflicts to wise practice agreement and national strategy
T2 - cooperative learning and coastal stewardship in estuarine floodplain management, Tweed River, eastern Australia
AU - White, Ian
AU - Melville, Mike
AU - Macdonald, Ben
AU - Quirk, Robert
AU - Hawken, Robert
AU - Tunks, Mark
AU - Buckley, Don
AU - Beattie, Rick
AU - Williams, John
AU - Heath, Lance
PY - 2007
Y1 - 2007
N2 - Appropriate information, participatory processes and wise practice agreements are key elements in reducing conflicts over the use and management of coastal resources. In this work we describe the evolution of a cooperative learning approach to coastal floodplain management, incorporating these elements. Government-encouraged drainage of coastal floodplains in eastern Australia caused accelerated oxidation of acid sulfate soils and export of diffuse acidic drainage into streams. Major impacts on infrastructure, ecology, fisheries and aquaculture resulted. In the Tweed River estuary, in 1987, all gilled organisms were killed by acid discharge from floodplain canelands. This generated major conflicts between fishers, environmentalists and sugarcane producers. The cooperative learning partnership that evolved, involving cane farmers, local government, and researchers, has produced better strategies for managing sulfidic estuarine areas and mitigating impacts on downstream ecosystems. These underpinned mandatory best practice management guidelines for the NSW sugar industry. Increases in productivity and decreases in acid discharge have resulted. Fish kills on the Tweed and elsewhere also generated broader, parallel whole-of-government approaches that led to Australia's national strategy for managing coastal acid sulfate soils and the rapid adoption of information and strategies across Australia.
AB - Appropriate information, participatory processes and wise practice agreements are key elements in reducing conflicts over the use and management of coastal resources. In this work we describe the evolution of a cooperative learning approach to coastal floodplain management, incorporating these elements. Government-encouraged drainage of coastal floodplains in eastern Australia caused accelerated oxidation of acid sulfate soils and export of diffuse acidic drainage into streams. Major impacts on infrastructure, ecology, fisheries and aquaculture resulted. In the Tweed River estuary, in 1987, all gilled organisms were killed by acid discharge from floodplain canelands. This generated major conflicts between fishers, environmentalists and sugarcane producers. The cooperative learning partnership that evolved, involving cane farmers, local government, and researchers, has produced better strategies for managing sulfidic estuarine areas and mitigating impacts on downstream ecosystems. These underpinned mandatory best practice management guidelines for the NSW sugar industry. Increases in productivity and decreases in acid discharge have resulted. Fish kills on the Tweed and elsewhere also generated broader, parallel whole-of-government approaches that led to Australia's national strategy for managing coastal acid sulfate soils and the rapid adoption of information and strategies across Australia.
KW - Acid sulfate soils
KW - Acidic discharge
KW - Coastal floodplain management
KW - Cooperative learning
KW - Diffuse source pollution
KW - Wise practice agreements
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=34248147086&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.jclepro.2006.07.049
DO - 10.1016/j.jclepro.2006.07.049
M3 - Article
SN - 0959-6526
VL - 15
SP - 1545
EP - 1558
JO - Journal of Cleaner Production
JF - Journal of Cleaner Production
IS - 16
ER -