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A risk framework for preventing salinity
Authors:Michael J Grundy  D Mark Silburn  Tessa Chamberlain
Institution:1. CSIRO Water for a Healthy Country Flagship , QBP, 306 Carmody Rd, St Lucia, Qld, 4067, Australia;2. Department of Natural Resources and Water , P.O. Box 318, Toowoomba, Qld, 4350, Australia;3. Department of Natural Resources and Water , 80 Meiers Road, Indooroopilly, Qld, 4068, Australia
Abstract:Salinity is an insidious soil conservation issue. Its expression can be greatly removed in time and space from its causes, so a focus on prevention is preferred. To avoid over or under-investment, a communication strategy for salinity needs to be a staged approach, the risks defined and the assets at risk identified.

This paper describes a risk assessment schema and associated information base designed to support community investment in preventative actions. It describes a new approach to salinity risk similar to the concepts of diagnosis and staging used by physicians for diseases such as cancer. It outlines the diagnostic tools now being developed to define the timeframes of salinity development, the biophysical features of the landscape within which salinity develops and the riskiness of current and alternative management systems and matches this with a complementary community process designed to build knowledge and intervention. A GIS/database system captures the concepts of salinity risk and a large array of diagnostic information in a form designed for the development of salinity knowledge in the community and to guide investment in salinity prevention. The communication strategy and the salinity risk system are being applied in the Fitzroy Basin, Australia, an area of approximately 150,000 km2 straddling the Tropic of Capricorn.
Keywords:Salinity  Risk  Salinity modeling
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