Following the third session of the forum, we held a question and answer session facilitated by Paul Willis. The presentations covered by this plenary session were:
Citizen science for turtles: Risk, potentials and successes (Claudia Santori, University of Sydney)
Unleashing the potential of citizen science for NSW (Erin Roger, NSW Office of Environment and Heritage)
How social media can create impacts for research (Paul Willis, Media Engagement Services)
A citizen-driven tool to help monitor avian biodiversity in urban greenspaces of Sydney (Corey Callagham, University of New South Wales)
Where the wild things go: a new epoch for animal biotelemetry (Peggy Newman, Atlas of Living Australia)
The posters covered by this plenary session were:
From scats to traps: how scat samples paved the way for future research (Rebecca Gooley, University of Sydney)
Characterising the diet of Tasmanian devils introduced to an offshore island (Elspeth Mclennan, University of Sydney)
What we can do with poo: studying the gut microbiome of the endangered Tasmanian devil (Rowena Chong, University of Sydney)
Using passive acoustic recording and automated call identification to survey koalas in the southern forests of New South Wales (Brad Law, NSW Department of Primary Industries)