Rachel Paltridge is an arid-zone ecologist. She is a research facilitator at the Indigenous Desert Alliance and holds adjunct positions at the University of Western Australia and Charles Darwin University.
After completing her PhD on predator–prey interactions in spinifex grasslands, Rachel spent 20 years as a freelance ecologist in central Australia, working primarily with Indigenous ranger groups on projects at the interface between research and management. From 2018–22, she worked as the Coordinator of the Kiwirrkurra Indigenous Protected Area.
Rachel is passionate about two-way science, integrating traditional Indigenous knowledge and skills with the latest technologies, and scientific methods to come up with innovative methods to manage and monitor biodiversity.
Her research has focused on understanding and managing the threats of fire and predation to threatened species, such as night parrots, great desert skinks and bilbies, and developing long-term monitoring programs for arid zone fauna. She has also studied the impacts of Indigenous burning practices and cat hunting on persistence of threatened species which has led to management recommendations for the protection of declining fauna.
Rachel has studied the ecology of cats, foxes and dingoes in the spinifex grasslands of central Australia since the 1990s. Her analysis of thousands of predator scats over this period has contributed to our understanding of the significance of cat predation on threatened species and the potential role of dingoes in regulating cat populations.
She has collaborated with various Indigenous ranger groups on long-term predator control programs including documenting the effectiveness of Indigenous tracking techniques to reduce cat impacts on threatened species, conducting an annual cat-baiting program to restore mammal populations on an island in the Gulf of Carpentaria and combining traditional tracking techniques with leg-hold trapping to control cats around a population of great desert skinks.