All Higher Education NewsAll Trending Jobs & Careers News

Indigenous Collaborations Fuel eDNA Breakthroughs in Australian Wildlife Tracking

Australian Universities Revolutionize Conservation with Environmental DNA

  • higher-education-research
  • australian-universities
  • wildlife-conservation
  • research-publication-news
  • curtin-university

Be the first to comment on this article!

You

Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Sign with animal and dog-related instructions.
Photo by Wolfgang Vrede on Unsplash

Promote Your Research… Share it Worldwide

Have a story or written a research paper? Become a contributor and publish your work on AcademicJobs.com.

Submit your Research - Make it Global News

Australia faces one of the world's most severe biodiversity crises, with approximately 40 mammal species extinct since European colonization in 1788, the highest rate globally. 83 Amid this, environmental DNA (eDNA) technology is emerging as a game-changer for wildlife tracking, enabling non-invasive detection of species through genetic traces left in the environment. Australian universities are at the forefront, collaborating with Indigenous communities to adapt eDNA for local contexts, blending scientific innovation with Traditional Knowledge to protect threatened species and ecosystems.

This breakthrough is particularly timely as climate change, habitat loss, and invasive species accelerate declines. eDNA offers a scalable, cost-effective alternative to traditional methods like camera traps or visual surveys, detecting up to 25% more mammal species in some studies. 119 Higher education institutions across the country are driving these advances, fostering research careers and partnerships that honor Indigenous stewardship of Country.

Understanding Environmental DNA: The Science Behind the Breakthrough

Environmental DNA, or eDNA, is the genetic material organisms shed into their surroundings through skin cells, feces, urine, saliva, or hair. Unlike direct sampling, eDNA captures this 'genetic fingerprint' from environmental matrices like water, soil, air, or snow, providing a snapshot of biodiversity without disturbing wildlife.

The process works step-by-step: 1) Collect samples (e.g., filter water or swab surfaces); 2) Extract DNA in the lab; 3) Amplify target sequences using polymerase chain reaction (PCR); 4) Sequence and match against reference databases like the new CSIRO National Biodiversity DNA Library. 81 Meta-analyses show eDNA is more sensitive, detecting more species and requiring fewer samples than conventional methods. 112

In Australia, where over 1,800 species are threatened, eDNA's precision is vital for elusive mammals like bilbies or potoroos, whose populations have plummeted.

Australian Universities Pioneering eDNA Innovations

Universities are central to eDNA's rise, securing ARC grants and leading field trials. The University of Queensland (UQ) developed airborne eDNA collectors, hanging devices in eucalyptus trees to capture DNA-laden particles. 82 Associate Professor Celine Frere's team tested them on koalas in Redlands, Queensland, proving viability for endangered gliders and possums.

Curtin University's eDNA Frontiers lab, with $7.8 million expansion funding, analyzes terrestrial fauna across southwest Western Australia, using spider webs and airborne sampling for vertebrates. 55 Their PhD research by Joshua Newton demonstrated airborne eDNA's regional-scale potential over 1,155 km transects.

University of Queensland airborne eDNA sampler in eucalyptus tree for koala detection

Historical eDNA: Unlocking Australia's Wildlife Past

The University of Adelaide's Environment Institute partners with Australian Wildlife Conservancy (AWC) on ARC-funded historical eDNA research. Soil from remote caves at sanctuaries like Newhaven (NT) and Buckaringa (SA) preserves ancient DNA, revealing past ranges of threatened species like bilbies. 57 This informs reintroduction strategies, addressing Australia's extinction legacy.

Collaborations extend to Ngalurrtju Aboriginal Land Trust and Central Land Council, integrating Traditional Owners in sampling on their lands.

a large white building with sails on top of it

Photo by mae black on Unsplash

Indigenous Collaborations: Blending Knowledge Systems

Ethical eDNA use demands Indigenous engagement, as Monash University researchers Matilda Handsley-Davis and colleagues emphasize in their 2021 paper. 121 eDNA can reveal human ancestry, requiring consent and co-governance. Australian projects exemplify this: James Cook University (JCU) refined tropical eDNA methods for northern rivers, training Indigenous rangers to monitor cane toads and Wet Tropics frogs. 80

Southern Cross University (SCU) surveyed 34 NSW estuaries with rangers from six Aboriginal Land Councils, detecting platypus, rakali, and invasives like cane toads, empowering cultural site monitoring. 132 SCU's interactive map shares findings publicly.

Case Study: Safeguarding the Tjakuṟa Skink with CSIRO and ANU

At Uluṟu-Kata Tjuṯa, CSIRO's project with Aṉangu Rangers uses eDNA from sand, air, and scats to study the Vulnerable Great Desert Skink (Tjakuṟa). Traditional Knowledge locates burrows; eDNA reveals diets (omnivorous: termites, bush tomatoes) and occupancy without disturbance. 133 Australian National University collaborates, sequencing the first complete mitochondrial genome. This supports fire management and translocations per the Threatened Species Action Plan.

Cultural significance: Tjakuṟa embodies Tjukurpa, linking Aṉangu to Country.

Gunditjmara and EnviroDNA at Budj Bim World Heritage Site

Gunditjmara Traditional Owners lead eDNA surveys in southwest Victoria's Budj Bim, identifying 53 aquatic species. Rangers govern data, aligning with cultural priorities for fisheries and restoration amid climate change. 56

Challenges and Ethical Considerations

Despite advantages, eDNA faces limits: detection windows (days-weeks), false negatives, database gaps. Costs drop with libraries like CSIRO's NBDL covering 2,500 fish species. 81 Ethical frameworks, per Monash's guidance, ensure Indigenous data sovereignty.

Funding: ARC Discovery Projects 2026 awarded $376M, including eDNA-related grants to Newcastle, Melbourne unis. 128

A sunny tree with green leaves and branches.

Photo by Amber BC on Unsplash

Future Outlook: eDNA's Role in Australian Higher Education

With eDNA conferences and global expansion, Australian unis position as leaders. ARC and NHMRC grants spur PhDs, postdocs in genomics, ecology. Collaborations create jobs in research assistance, lecturing. 122

Implications: Better threat detection (invasives like cane toads), restoration, policy. For students, fields like molecular ecology boom, blending tech with cultural respect.

Soil sample collection for historical eDNA analysis at Australian Wildlife Conservancy sanctuary

These university-driven, Indigenous-informed breakthroughs promise to stem Australia's extinction tide, fostering sustainable futures.

Portrait of Prof. Marcus Blackwell

Prof. Marcus BlackwellView full profile

Contributing Writer

Shaping the future of academia with expertise in research methodologies and innovation.

Discussion

Sort by:

Be the first to comment on this article!

You

Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

New0 comments

Join the conversation!

Add your comments now!

Have your say

Engagement level

Frequently Asked Questions

🧬What is environmental DNA (eDNA)?

eDNA is genetic material shed by organisms into water, soil, or air, enabling non-invasive species detection via lab analysis.

📈How does eDNA outperform traditional wildlife monitoring?

eDNA detects 25% more species, is cheaper and more sensitive per meta-analyses, ideal for elusive Australian mammals.119

🏛️Which Australian universities lead eDNA research?

UQ (airborne), Curtin (frontiers), Adelaide (historical), JCU (tropical), SCU (estuaries) drive innovations.

🤝How do Indigenous communities collaborate on eDNA projects?

Partners like Aṉangu, Gunditjmara, Ngalurrtju co-design protocols, train rangers, govern data per ethical frameworks.

🐨What species benefit from eDNA in Australia?

Koalas, bilbies, potoroos, Tjakuṟa skink, platypus, rakali; detects invasives like cane toads early.

✈️What is UQ's airborne eDNA technology?

Tree-hung filters capture air particles with eDNA for koala/glider detection; scalable for forests.82

How does historical eDNA work?

Cave soil preserves ancient DNA, revealing past ranges for reintroductions; U Adelaide-AWC project.

⚖️What ethical issues arise with eDNA and Indigenous lands?

Monash paper stresses consent, data sovereignty; projects co-govern to avoid cultural harms.121

💰What funding supports Australian eDNA research?

ARC Discovery 2026 ($376M), NHMRC; expands labs, PhDs in genomics/ecology.

💼Career opportunities in eDNA research?

Postdocs, research assistants, lecturers at unis; skills in molecular ecology, bioinformatics in demand.

🔮Future of eDNA in Australian conservation?

Scalable databases like CSIRO NBDL; real-time monitoring for policy, restoration amid extinctions.
 
Great
Trustpilot
TrustScore 4.2 | 21 reviews