Research Project
Researchers:
Cole, Victoria
(Point of contact, Principal investigator)
,
Connolly, Rod
(Point of contact, principalInvestigator, Principal investigator)
,
Connolly, Rod
(Point of contact, principalInvestigator, Principal investigator)
,
McDougall, Carmel
(Point of contact, principalInvestigator, Principal investigator)
,
McDougall, Carmel
(Point of contact, principalInvestigator, Principal investigator)
View all 11 related researchers
Brief description This record provides an overview of the NESP Marine and Coastal Hub small-scale study - "Towards a consolidated and open-science framework for restoration monitoring". No data outputs were generated by this project. -------------------- Coastal habitat restoration is scaling up rapidly in Australia and covers a range of diverse ecosystems including oyster reefs, seagrass meadows, mangrove forests, kelp forests, and saltmarshes. While monitoring is commonly included in these projects, approaches are often uncoordinated, inconsistently funded, and rarely follow open science protocols. Previous NESP-funded projects have advanced understanding of the ecology and service provision of threatened ecosystems and established targets for repair based on reference conditions (e.g. Marine Biodiversity Hub project B4). They also created a national database of marine and coastal restoration projects (Australian Coastal Restoration Network: project E5) and supported the development of monitoring, evaluation, reporting and improvement (MERI) systems across various sectors. Building on this foundation, the current project synthesised monitoring approaches across multiple habitat types by drawing on the collective expertise of Australian researchers. It also explored the integration of emerging technologies—such as automation, artificial intelligence, and eDNA—to improve monitoring efficiency and cost-effectiveness. The primary output of this project is a coordinated, open-science monitoring framework that incorporates clearly defined restoration goals and a core set of universal variables. Developed through expert consultation, the framework supports consistent benchmarking across projects while accommodating habitat-specific and goal-driven metrics. The framework promotes data accessibility, standardised definitions, and the integration of new technologies to streamline the development of future restoration projects and maximise the value of restoration monitoring. Outputs • Best-practice toolkit / final project report [written]
Lineage Maintenance and Update Frequency: asNeeded
Notes
Credit
National Environmental Science Program (NESP) Marine and Coastal Hub
Notes
Credit
Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water (DCCEEW), Australian Government
Notes
Credit
In addition to NESP (DCCEEW) funding, this project is matched by an equivalent amount of in-kind support and co-investment from project partners and collaborators.
Notes
Purpose
To develop a guidelines document (best-practice toolkit) for co-ordinated monitoring of restoration initiatives.
Data time period: 2021-09-01 to 2022-03-31
McDougall C, Cole V, Connolly RM (2022) Towards a consolidated and open-science framework for restoration monitoring. Report to the National Environmental Science Program. Griffith University. (Final Project Report)
(NESP Marine and Coastal Hub website)
uri :
https://nespmarinecoastal.edu.au/
(Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water: NESP MaC Hub website)
uri :
https://www.dcceew.gov.au/science-research/nesp/hub-marine-coastal
global : ee7f96b7-ab1e-4b65-87f5-b5632037c1d5
ror :
02sc3r913
ror :
050khh066
ror :
02sc3r913
ror :
050khh066
ror :
02sc3r913
ror :
050khh066
ror :
02sc3r913
Project RAiD
raid :
10.71676/515a8eb4
- global : 86d17e0f-c825-47d3-9480-114253bacd30