Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Rebecca J. Dobbs is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Rebecca J. Dobbs.


Marine and Freshwater Research | 2014

Customary and recreational fishing pressure: large-bodied fish assemblages in a tropical, intermittent Australian river

Paul Close; Rebecca J. Dobbs; David Tunbridge; Peter Speldewinde; Danielle M. Warfe; Sandy Toussaint; Peter M. Davies

Permanent waterholes in intermittent rivers of northern Australia support a diverse piscifauna and are popular areas for customary and recreational fishing. The present preliminary study explored the perception that fishing reduces the abundance of targeted, large-bodied species that become restricted to disconnected waterholes during the distinct dry season. River sites in the Fitzroy River catchment, Western Australia, could be clearly classified as experiencing either high or low fishing pressure by using metrics of human ‘accessibility’. The abundance of Hephaestus jenkinsi and Lates calcarifer, targeted by both recreational and customary fishers was highly correlated with accessibility and showed a negative relationship with fishing pressure. Non-target species showed no discernible trend. We estimated that 38% of river length remains subject to relatively low fishing pressure. These preliminary relationships suggest that fish harvest can potentially alter the structure of fish assemblages in disconnected habitats. The potential impact of fishing on the sustainability of fish populations is, most likely, greatest for non-diadromous species and will become more apparent with increasing distance from recolonisation sources. Combining management techniques that maintain recolonisation and recruitment potential with traditional fisheries management strategies (e.g. bag and size limits) presents a suitable approach to mitigate the effects of fish harvesting from tropical intermittent rivers.


Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries | 2016

Collaborative research partnerships inform monitoring and management of aquatic ecosystems by Indigenous rangers

Rebecca J. Dobbs; Christy L. Davies; Michelle Walker; Neil E. Pettit; Bradley James Pusey; Paul Close; Yoshi Akune; Ninjana Walsham; Brendan Smith; Albert Wiggan; Preston Cox; Douglas Ward; Fiona Tingle; Rod Kennett; Micha V. Jackson; Peter M. Davies

Aquatic ecosystems are critical to the long-term viability and vibrancy of communities and economies across northern Australia. In a region that supports significant cultural and ecological water values, partnerships between Indigenous and non-Indigenous stakeholders can benefit aquatic ecosystem management. We present, as a case study from the Kimberley region of Western Australia, a collaborative research program that successfully documented Indigenous and Western Scientific knowledge of remote wetlands, using a variety of field-based activities, questionnaires, interviews and workshops. The sharing of knowledge between Indigenous and non-Indigenous research partners facilitated a comprehensive understanding of ecosystem values, threats, processes, management priorities and aspirations. These formed the basis of a management plan and monitoring tools, designed to build the capacity of an Indigenous ranger group to engage in research, monitoring and management of wetlands. The project provides a useful example of the benefits of collaborations in the context of remote-area management where local communities are responsible for environmental management and monitoring, such as is the case in northern Australia and presumably other areas of the world.


Marine and Freshwater Research | 2016

Carbon sources for aquatic food webs of riverine and lacustrine tropical waterholes with variable groundwater influence

Neil E. Pettit; Danielle M. Warfe; Paul Close; Bradley James Pusey; Rebecca J. Dobbs; Christy L. Davies; Dominic Valdez; Peter M. Davies

Food web studies integrate ecological information and provide understanding of ecosystem function. Aquatic ecosystems of the Kimberley region (north-western Australia) have high conservation significance as hotspots for maintaining local and regional biodiversity. This study investigated the influence of waterhole type and persistence on the strength of consumer reliance on local energy resources for aquatic food webs. Changes in water isotopic composition indicated groundwater inputs were enough to overcome evaporative losses in some waterholes. Other waterholes had varying levels of isotope enrichment suggesting insufficient groundwater input to ‘compensate’ for evaporative loss. C and N isotope analysis indicated considerable overlap among energy sources in waterholes between macrophytes and periphyton but gradient analysis indicated that periphyton is a major carbon source for aquatic consumers. Groundwater-fed waterholes appeared to have higher quality food sources (indicated by lower C:N ratios), but there was minimal evidence that direct groundwater contributions were related to food web processes. Nonetheless, in a region where groundwater is influential in maintaining aquatic habitats, future development of groundwater reserves will likely affect the ecological and cultural value of freshwater wetlands by either reducing their permanence or size or indirectly through possible alteration to the role of periphyton in supporting the food web.


Ecology and Society | 2015

Environmental change: prospects for conservation and agriculture in a southwest Australia biodiversity hotspot

Neil E. Pettit; Robert J. Naiman; Julia M. Fry; J. Dale Roberts; Paul Close; Bradley James Pusey; Geoff S. Woodall; Colin J. Macgregor; Peter Speldewinde; Barbara A. Stewart; Rebecca J. Dobbs; Harriet Paterson; Peter A. Cook; Sandy Toussaint; Sarah Comer; Peter M. Davies

Accelerating environmental change is perhaps the greatest challenge for natural resource management; successful strategies need to be effective for decades to come. Our objective is to identify opportunities that new environmental conditions may provide for conservation, restoration, and resource use in a globally recognized biodiversity hotspot in southwestern Australia. We describe a variety of changes to key taxonomic groups and system-scale characteristics as a consequence of environmental change (climate and land use), and outline strategies for conserving and restoring important ecological and agricultural characteristics. Opportunities for conservation and economic adaptation are substantial because of gradients in rainfall, temperature, and land use, extensive areas of remnant native vegetation, the ability to reduce and ameliorate areas affected by secondary salinization, and the existence of large national parks and an extensive network of nature reserves. Opportunities presented by the predicted environmental changes encompass agricultural as well as natural ecosystems. These may include expansion of aquaculture, transformation of agricultural systems to adapt to drier autumns and winters, and potential increases in spring and summer rain, carbon-offset plantings, and improving the network of conservation reserves. A central management dilemma is whether restoration/preservation efforts should have a commercial or biodiversity focus, and how they could be integrated. Although the grand challenge is conserving, protecting, restoring, and managing for a future environment, one that balances economic, social, and environmental values, the ultimate goal is to establish a regional culture that values the unique regional environment and balances the utilization of natural resources against protecting remaining natural ecosystems.


Biological Conservation | 2015

Integrated cross-realm planning: A decision-makers' perspective

Jorge G. Álvarez-Romero; Vanessa M. Adams; Robert L. Pressey; Michael M. Douglas; Allan Dale; Amélie A. Augé; Derek Ball; John Childs; Michael J. Digby; Rebecca J. Dobbs; Niilo Gobius; D. Hinchley; Ian M. Lancaster; Mirjam Maughan; Ian Perdrisat


Journal of economic and social policy | 2014

catchment-scale governance in northern australia: a preliminary evaluation

Allan Dale; Bob Pressey; Vanessa M. Adams; Jorge G Alvarez Romero; Mike Digby; Rebecca J. Dobbs; Michael M. Douglas; Amélie A. Augé; Mirjam Maughan; John Childs; D. Hinchley; Ian Landcaster; Ian Perdrisat; Niilo Gobius


Journal of the Royal Society of Western Australia | 2014

Prediction of potentially significant fish harvest using metrics of accessibility in northern Western Australia

Paul Close; Rebecca J. Dobbs; T. Ryan; K. Ryan; Peter Speldewinde; Sandy Toussaint


Archive | 2011

Trial of the Framework for the Assessment of River and Wetland Health (FARWH) in the Wet/Dry Tropics for the Daly and Fitzroy Rivers

Ian H. Dixon; Rebecca J. Dobbs; Simon A. Townsend; Paul Close; Emma Ligtermoet; Ruth A. Duncan; Mark J. Kennard; David Tunbridge


Ecology and Society | 2018

Wetlands need people: a framework for understanding and promoting Australian indigenous wetland management

Michelle L. Pyke; Sandy Toussaint; Paul Close; Rebecca J. Dobbs; Irene Davey; Kevin J. George; Daniel Oades; Deborah Sibosado; Phillip McCarthy; Cecelia Tigan; Bernadette Angus; Elaine Riley; Devena Cox; Zynal Cox; Brendan Smith; Preston Cox; Albert Wiggan; Julian Clifton


Archive | 2015

Nyul Nyul freshwater management and monitoring plan

Rebecca J. Dobbs; Christy L. Davies; Neil E. Pettit; Brad Pusey; Michelle Walker; Fiona Tingle

Collaboration


Dive into the Rebecca J. Dobbs's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Paul Close

University of Western Australia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Neil E. Pettit

University of Western Australia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Peter M. Davies

University of Western Australia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sandy Toussaint

University of Western Australia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Bradley James Pusey

University of Western Australia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Peter Speldewinde

University of Western Australia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Fiona Tingle

University of Western Australia

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge