Biodiversity in the Australian Cotton Industry: A literature review
Abstract
'Biodiversity' refers to the diversity of genes, species, ecosystems and ecoregions. Like other
sectors in the Australian economy, the cotton industry has a duty of care to ensure its
environmental sustainability, including conserving and enhancing the biodiversity upon which
it depends and minimising negative environmental impacts. Australia ratified the United
Nations Convention on BiologicaI Diversity, in June 1992. The Convention noted the global
loss of biodiversity as a result of human activities, identified the need to conserve biodiversity
in viable areas of natural or restored habitat, and recognised the need to mitigate the processes
that most threaten biodiversity. Subsequent Commonwealth and State legislation and policies
have given effect to the Convention.
Biodiversity is important for ecosystem (life support), ethical, aesthetic and cultural and
economic reasons. The challenge is to balance utilisation of biodiversity on the one hand with
its conservation to ensure that present and future human welfare is not compromised. This is
not easy due to the value judgements and diversity of private and public interests involved, as
well as the incomplete nature of the science of biodiversity and its poor predictive power for
decision making. This report aims to revioew the literature of past and current cotton-funded research and is limited to
Queensland and New South Wales cotton growing areas.
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- 2003 Final Reports
CRDC Final reports submitted 2003