Land conservation studies are launched

Mal Gill
Updated September 27 2018 - 1:05pm, first published July 4 2017 - 6:00am
Regional Development and Food and Agriculture Minister Alannah MacTiernan (second from right) launched My Country, Our Outback: Voices from the land of hope and change in Australia's heartland report, funded by The Pew Charitable Trusts, in Kings Park last week. With her are the trusts' Australian project director Barry Traill (left), one of 12 case studies in the report Ngadu Great Western Woodla
Regional Development and Food and Agriculture Minister Alannah MacTiernan (second from right) launched My Country, Our Outback: Voices from the land of hope and change in Australia's heartland report, funded by The Pew Charitable Trusts, in Kings Park last week. With her are the trusts' Australian project director Barry Traill (left), one of 12 case studies in the report Ngadu Great Western Woodla

COMBINING traditional knowledge of caring for country with modern science is the way forward for the pastoral region and outback Western Australia, according to Regional Development and Food and Agriculture Minister Alannah MacTiernan.

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Mal Gill

Mal Gill

Writer

Wool and dairy writer for Farm Weekly.

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