Jason7Stewart2016onNM

Pic: 2023 Jan 6 Kubirri wawubaja [Mossman R Foxton] tropical whirligig *Macrogyrus* sp. (cropped). 

In Boonwurrung Country –sand-(stone)-belt– SE. of Melb., Dharawal Country, Woiwurrung Country, 1970–2000 I grew up.

I am a life long cultured nature person, living in cultural–natural ecosystems with first peooples for many years, in the SE. – NE. of this continent, most of all in these Countries (languages–peoples inclusive): 
Boon-wurrung, Woi-wurrung, Dharawal, Dja-Dja-wurrung, Djab–wurrung, Yalanji, Birdhawal, Gadigal–Eora, Guringai, Yidinji, etc. . 

I do professional cultural-natural ecosystems' regeneration facilitation (pro. field ecology–botany, inclusive) 
life–work since 1989 more than 35 y ago. 

A few fun, relevant, life memories examples: 

• From the ages of kindergarten (aka preschool from 3 yo) to finishing primary school, included sharing mutual inclusion with the son of a 1950s–60s famous sportsman from the first people of Bourke, originally, in 1970s living then in Boonwurrung Country.

Initiating life awarenesses, including inter-cultural ups and downs experiences in sharing life with first peoples' lives, their overcoming European–invasion–colonisation caused struggles, and shared experiences regarding respective first Countries. Experiences that most other European–Australians in my biological family and some of my friends in childhood, high school and Melb. adult life, did not have growing up.

Expanding into my, life–long, experiences with first peoples' societies, cultures, languages, philosophies, ways, respect, resilience and more (awesome first peoples, from beyond Europe and many experiences shared, including with me, beyond European ethnocentrism). 

Even as our own biological family ancestry that I have systematic and/or documented knowledge of to date, does not include first peoples ancestors.

For example, mid. 1800s D. Stewart male immigrant from Perthshire, Scotland to the SE of this continent mainland (later: Vic.) —one of our paternal ancestors and his partner ... ...(?) in Au – and their subsequent generations until our generations today. 

My mother's side (maternal) ancestors', who immigrated into here in Au from the mid. 1800s, mostly only males we have documentation about them coming from: Cornwall, Wales, Ireland, Languedoc France, etc., also to the same SE region 
– yet we have also only partial documentation of our maternal female ancestors and where they're really from (?). 

Who were all our ancestors? (not only the males —we only have partial documented knowledge, of mostly the males?). 

• When five years old, joined the Black Rock junior field naturalists' club (Melb.), with my brother, sister and parents. 

• My family – brother, sister, parents and I, in the 1970s we went on a special family holiday in Yalanji Bubu (Country).
Yalanji Country, awesome!, including Marrdja ecosystems and Bama–bama (people), notably 'Cape Trib.', undegraded then, magnificent 'catherdral like' tall forest just in from the beach side and the just as awesome littoral forest (yet less tall), made a major impression on and inspiration for me at my young age.


Music, some current playlists from thousands of great music pieces I listen to.

 

Over the last forty years since teen age i have read more than ten thousand evidences' based, peer reviewed, scholarly literature publications, including: published articles, books, chapters, monographs and data science papers;
most of all in ecology, applied ecology, ecosystems regeneration, ecological restoration, reconstruction and restoration ecology, landscapes and spatial ecology, functional traits classification systems, plants' and animals' evolutionary taxonomy, conservation biology, natural history (since 5yo), population genetics including plants–animals–microorganisms, conservation genetics viz. outbreeding, inbreeding, heterosis and introgression, etc., agricultural genuine sustainability science, ethnobotany, archaeobotany, palaeoecology, biogeography, anthropology, ethnography, archaeology, indigenous studies, feminist studies, 'whiteness' studies especially learned and affirmed enormous honesties listening to Aileen Moreton-Robinson, honest history, decolonisation and so on.

Currently reading more incl. these books, with my well informed and well read, compassionate and critical thinking: 

Career works include many parts such as eg. :  

• professional roles in field ecology, field botany, ecosystems regeneration and restoration, working with first peoples since the early 90s in Melb., ecological and botanical surveys, mapping, monitoring, plants and seedlings identification including grasses, sedges and rushes (uncommon skills), extensive ecological (geo-)databases design, construction, use and management, herbarium specimens' collection, preparation, databasing and identification, GIS (all aspects see below), etc.; 

• practical getting hands dirty roles in pest plants removal and herbicide treatment, ecological and culturally informed burning, genuinely ecologically sustainable farming —soil depositing— and nursery propagating of indigenous plants' species, etc.;  

• professional roles (office based with p/t fieldwork data collection), in Geographic Information Systems (GIS) and databases (DB) design, construction, use, analyses and syntheses, integration, management, training staff in, field data collection systems design and integration, high precision GPS organisation, integration and use, computer programming and coding, Apple Mac and iPhone–iPad OSs, MS Windows OS, Office, etc.. - specially skilled in professional best practices of ecological subject matter GISs-DBs.

The above professional career parts include roles I've had in Au: state, national and local governments, first peoples' and others' community organisations, not for profits, companies and more. 

 

A quote I coined today (2021 Sept. 21), regarding any systematic thinking topic: 

"Ignorance based absence of evidence has nothing in common with a well attested evidence of an absence based on comprehensive survey results' real knowledge of the evidences of presences, uncertainties and absences". 

 

2021 Oct. 8: " Credentials do not comprise a religion, hence do not let anybody suffer from the fallacious delusions of credentialism ".  (~ism refers to ideology per se of any form).

In systematic thinking reality credentials just summarise an institution's snapshot in time assessments of an individual's academic practices within a small disciplinary subject, so long as the assessed person didn't cheat any of the assessments;
which far too many people have told me, confiding that they have done and in my honesty I refused to do or to accept from other persons. 

Again, not a supremacist religion and in reality, not nearly as important as too many European ancestry ethnocentric, perverted and imperialistic people have pretended.

My own photographs, videos, text, information and so on © copyright Jason Stewart 1970 – 2024– ongoing all rights reserved 
(unless stated in specific information that some parts of it have come from an additional source as well as me then copyright attribution to the source of that part).

I welcome requests for permission for use of these photographs so long as the requester clearly demonstrates ongoing respect,
including does not take for granted that i would supply the photos and/or information requested;
including for the original high resolution photographs which include full EXIF data ... .

Many (ca. 7,000+) of my photographs made, carefully, with a mere Canon IXUS 150;
merely a handheld small camera with a high quality lens, including the built in functionality of the optical zoom up to 8x, the macro focus (close-up), and with 16 megapixels.

Since 2021–2022, a mere Canon IXUS 190; (as the 150 lens was worn by so much use and accidental lens rubbing on trees' parts while macro photo making at less than 10 mm).

Some photographs made with, an iPhone or the many other mobile phones I've had.

In City of Kingston work (1994–1999) I procured and used: early digital cameras eg. Kodak DC 120, devices for field surveying eg. Apple MessagePads, and office: ESRI ArcGIS.

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Jason7Stewart2016onNM is a moderator for the following categories:

Birds  |  Birds of prey Cuckoos Nocturnal Birds Other Birds Honeyeater Intermediate size Magpie or larger Small (Robin, Finch, Thornbill etc) Parrots Pigeons and Doves Water birds Colonial nesters (Herons, Cormorants, etc) Other Waterbirds (Crakes, Grebes, Gulls and Terns) Sea Birds Shorebirds Waterfowl (Ducks, Geese, Swans)

Insects  |  Ants (Hymenoptera, Formicidae) Bees (Hymenoptera, Apiformes) Beetles (Coleoptera) Carab beetles (Carabidae) Checkered Beetles (Cleridae) Click beetles (Elateridae) Darkling beetles (Tenebrionidae) Jewel beetles (Buprestidae) Lady beetles (Coccinellidae) Leaf beetles (Chrysomelidae) Longhorn beetles (Cerambycidae) Other beetles Rove beetles (Staphylinidae) Scarab beetles (Scarabaeidae) Stag beetles (Lucanidae) Water beetles (several families) Weevils (Curculionoidea) Butterflies (Lepidoptera, Rhopalocera) Blues & Coppers (Lycaenidae) Nymphs (Nymphalidae) Skippers (Hesperiidae) Swallowtails (Papilionidae) Whites & Yellows (Pieridae) Cicadas (Hemiptera, Cicadoidea) Cockroaches (Blattodea, several families) Dragonflies & Damselflies (Odonata) Damselflies (Zygoptera) Dragonflies (Anisoptera) Grasshoppers, Crickets & Katydids (Orthoptera) Crickets (Orthoptera, several families) Grasshoppers (several families) Katydids (Tettigoniidae) Lacewings (Neuroptera) Antlions (Myrmeleontidae) Brown Lacewings (Hemerobiidae) Green Lacewings (Chrysopidae) Other Lacewings (several families) Leafhoppers & planthoppers (Hemiptera, several families) Moths (Lepidoptera) Anthelid moths (Anthelidae) Case moths (Psychidae) Concealer moths (Oecophoridae) Curved-horn moths (all Gelechioidea except Oecophoridae) Emperor moths (Saturniidae) Geometer moths (Geometridae) Hawk moths (Sphingidae) Noctuoid moths (except Arctiinae) Other moths Pyralid or Snout Moths (Pyralidae & Crambidae) Sun moths (Castniidae) Swift and Ghost moths (Hepialidae) Tiger moths (Arctiinae) Tortricid moths (Tortricidae) Wood moths (Cossidae) Other insects Caddisflies (Trichoptera) Dobsonflies & Alderflies (Megaloptera) Earwigs (Dermaptera) Fleas (Siphonaptera) Lice (Psocodea, Phthiraptera, several families) Mayflies (Ephemeroptera) Plant Lice (Psocodea, Pscoptera, several families) Scorpionflies and Hangingflies (Mecoptera) Stoneflies (Plecoptera) Termites (superfamily Termitoidea) Thrips (Thysanoptera) Webspinners (Embioptera) Praying mantises (Mantodea) Primitive insects Other primitive insects Silverfish (Zygentoma) Springtails (Collembola) Psyllids, lerps, aphids & whiteflies (Hemiptera, several families) Sawflies (Hymenoptera, Symphyta) Scale insects & mealybugs (Hemiptera, Coccoidea) Stick insects (Phasmatodea) True bugs (Hemiptera, Heteroptera) Assassin bugs (Reduviidae) Other true bugs Shield, Stink & Jewel Bugs (Pentatomoidea) Water & Shore Bugs (several families) True flies (Diptera) Bee flies (Bombyliidae) Blow flies (Calliphoridae) Bristle Flies (Tachinidae) Crane flies, midges, mosquitoes & gnats (several families) Flower-loving flies (Apioceridae) Hover flies (Syrphidae) Long-legged Flies (Dolichopodidae) March or Horse flies (Tabanidae) Mydas flies (Mydidae) Other true flies Pelecorhynchid flies (Pelecorhynchidae) Robber flies (Asilidae) Stiletto flies (Therevidae) Tangle-vein flies (Nemestrinidae) Unidentified Insect Galls Acacia Galls Eucalyptus Galls Other Plant Galls Wasps (Hymenoptera, Apocrita) Flower wasps (Scoliidae & Tiphiidae) Other wasps Parasitic wasps (numerous families) Potter wasps (Vespidae, Eumeninae) Sand or digger wasps (Crabronidae & Sphecidae) Social or paper-nest wasps (Vespidae, Polistinae & Vespinae) Spider wasps (Pompilidae) Velvet Ants (Mutillidae)

Mammals  |  Bats Flying Foxes & Other Megabats Microbats Feral hoofed introduced mammals Deer Other hoofed mammals Kangaroos & Wallabies Monotremes Other Mammals Placental Predators Possums & Gliders Gliders Possums Quolls & Tasmanian Devils Rabbits & Hares Rodents Mice Rats Sea Mammals Small Marsupials Antechinuses Other Small Marsupials Wombats & Koalas

Plants  |  Cacti & Succulents Climbers & Mistletoes Daisies Ferns and Clubmosses Grasses Gum Trees Lilies & Irises Marine Water Plants Orchids Other Fresh Water Plants Other Shrubs Other Trees Other Wildflowers & Herbs Peas Rushes, Sedges & Mat Rushes Wattles

Reptiles and Frogs  |  Crocodiles Dragons Frogs Legless Lizards Monitors & Geckos Skinks Snakes Turtles

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