Innovative conservation solutions for Australia — and beyond

 
 
 

The successful conservation and restoration of nature in Australia is of paramount importance. Not only because of Australia’s astounding ecosystems, ‘megadiverse’ status and capacity to contribute to global climate targets, but also because of Australia’s role in supporting the conservation and restoration ambitions of our neighbors in the Asia-Pacific and beyond.

Virginia Simpson
Senior Country Manager, Australia

 
 

Founded in 2020, Conservation International-Australia is one of our newest country offices, supporting innovative financing and science to drive conservation locally and throughout the region.

In Australia, Our team is working to draw more attention, funding and opportunities to the country’s coastal ecosystems — areas that, despite years of poor development planning, are rich in biodiversity, store vital carbon, and hold immense cultural and economic value. We are supporting the participation of Indigenous Peoples and unlocking funding streams for the long-term care of Australia's "sea country."

We also operate as a key fundraising arm for Conservation International's Asia-Pacific and global programs. Via partnerships with the private sector, government and individuals, we actively support the protection of nature in Asia-Pacific — from revitalizing ocean custodianship among Samoa’s schoolchildren to helping improve conservation planning in Indonesia by funding tiger monitoring.

Our mission is to provide urgent and innovative conservation solutions that support both people and nature.

 

Highlight project

© Tidal Moon

Partnering to restore seagrass in Shark Bay

Remote, vast and wildly beautiful, Shark Bay is a UNESCO World Heritage Area on the western-most tip of Australia. The region was granted World Heritage status in part due to the significance of its seagrass meadows, which shelter a huge diversity of marine life and lock vast stores of ancient carbon beneath their roots. This is the home of the Malgana people, who have a 30,000-year connection to this, their "sea country."

Conservation International is partnering with Tidal Moon, a Malgana-owned and crewed company, to restore seagrass lost in a huge heatwave in 2011. An estimated 25 percent of Shark Bay's seagrass meadows perished in the heatwave — much of which has not recovered — directly impacting biodiversity. Of additional concern is the release of carbon as the seafloor erodes without the seagrass to hold it in place.

Tidal Moon is integrating seagrass replanting with their budding sea-cucumber business, partly in recognition of the co-dependent relationship between seagrass and sea cucumbers. The restoration is of global importance, but it is an expensive undertaking. Conservation International-Australia is working with Tidal Moon to build their scale and capacity to the point where they may be able to sell carbon and biodiversity credits to the market to fund their restoration work well into the future.

Success in Shark Bay will be a national win from a climate and biodiversity standpoint. Equally importantly, it will blaze a trail with a new, nature-positive business model for other communities and Indigenous-led projects to follow.

 

Where we work in Australia

 

News from Australia

After Australia’s bushfires, AI cameras capture wildlife recovery

© Grant Linley/Charles Sturt University. Swamp wallabies in New South Wales

Three years after Australia’s most devastating fire season ever, new images from 1,100 motion-activated cameras placed across the country’s scorched forests are giving researchers an unequaled view into wildlife recovery — and the results are more promising than anticipated.

Project “Eyes on Recovery” — a collaboration between the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) and Conservation International, and supported by Google — has gathered more than 7 million photos, with many showing vulnerable species returning to their habitats. The cameras snapped koalas, a rare group of echidnas (also known as spiny anteaters), a female wombat and her joey, dingo pups, and critically endangered Kangaroo Island dunnarts (mouse-sized marsupials).

© Grant Linley/Charles Sturt University

Female wombat and her joey.

“We didn’t know what to expect — some of these species saw up to 90 percent of their habitat destroyed,” said Conservation International wildlife scientist Jorge Ahumada. “We’re finding that native species are more resilient than we thought.”

The “Black Summer” bushfires of 2019-2020 killed or displaced nearly 3 billion native animals. To understand how wildlife would recover, researchers turned to Wildlife Insights, a platform powered by an artificial intelligence (AI) model developed at Google and operated in partnership by Conservation International, the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences, the Smithsonian’s National Zoo, the Wildlife Conservation Society, WWF and other organizations.

©Kangaroo Island Landscape Board

A train of short-beaked echidnas on Kangaroo Island.

Initially, Wildlife Insights didn’t have data on Australian wildlife — meaning, the AI model had to learn to distinguish a wombat from a pig, or a kangaroo from a deer. Now, it can identify more than 150 Australian species with 90 percent accuracy on average, said Ahumada, Wildlife Insights’ executive director.

Without the AI technology, researchers would have had to review millions of images one by one — a tedious and time-consuming task. Wildlife Insights processed the images captured by motion-activated cameras five to ten times faster than a human — thanks in large part to its ability to filter out blanks, which can account for the vast majority of images.

The analysis not only proves the presence of vulnerable species — it also provides information on their recovery. Koalas, for example, were among the hardest hit species. An estimated 60,000 were killed, injured or displaced as wildfires tore through the eucalyptus forests where they live. The damage was so devastating that last year the Australian government declared koalas endangered across much of eastern Australia, citing impacts from the wildfires, drought and habitat loss. Field cameras captured koalas roaming the forest floor, which is unusual for a species that spends most of its time perched in trees. It’s an indication that the forest is still recovering, but wildlife is returning.

© Science for Wildlife

A koala carrying a joey in the New South Wales Blue Mountains.

The cameras also recorded images of invasive species, such as feral cats, foxes and cane toads, which can kill or compete with native species.

“In a place like Australia, where invasive species are pervasive, it’s really important to understand how fire can lead to an increase in invasive species, which often colonize areas that are disturbed,” Ahumada said.

Researchers say the response to natural disasters like wildfires is often driven by incomplete information. Satellite imagery shows the extent of the damage, but the impacts to wildlife can be less clear.

“Eyes on Recovery” could change that by offering new data into nature’s resilience — and where native species need additional support recovering. This could inform investment priorities and more proactive measures like protecting areas where fires are less likely to occur so they can serve as habitat refuges — or installing food and water stations after a fire for species that are slower to return to their natural habitats.

“We talk about resiliency in nature frequently, and how we must increase it in the face of climate change and more frequent natural disasters,” Ahumada said. “But what exactly does that mean? These cameras — and the AI we’ve developed — are giving us clues that can support species’ survival in future wildfires.”

© Southern Ark

Dingo pups in East Gippsland, Victoria.


Further reading

Mary Kate McCoy is a staff writer at Conservation International. Want to read more stories like this? Sign up for email updates. Also, please consider supporting our critical work.

 

Learn more

Hear directly from Conservation International employees on the ground in Australia.

 

References

  1. Conservation International (2021, November). Irrecoverable Carbon. Retrieved January 2025, from https://www.conservation.org/projects/irrecoverable-carbon
  2. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. (2024). Table 8a: Total, threatened, and EX & EW endemic species in each country [Fact sheet]. https://www.iucnredlist.org/resources/summary-statistics#Summary%20Tables
  3. 30x30 SkyTruth. (2024, October). Marine Conservation Coverage. https://30x30.skytruth.org/progress-tracker?layers=6,144,7,145&settings=%7B%2522bbox%2522:%5B-167.96,-61.4,167.96,61.4%5D,%2522labels%2522:true%7D