Removing Turbina to Help Mabi Forest

Removing Turbina Vine

8 AUGUST 2025

New Project to remove forest-smothering turbina vine

A campaign is happening on the Atherton Tablelands to remove turbina vine and better protect endangered Mabi forest.

Landholders and organisations have joined forces to remove the South American vine from more than 50 hectares of Mabi forest over the past month – as part of a bigger Terrain NRM project to protect and restore some of the Wet Tropics’ most threatened forest eco-systems.

Barron Catchment Care’s Bryony Barnett said turbina could form 20-metre vine towers over native trees, smothering and out-competing the natural vegetation.

“Mabi Forest is confined to North Queensland, mostly on the Atherton Tablelands, and is listed nationally as a critically endangered rainforest ecological community because only small, isolated patches remain,’’ she said.

“We really need to look after what’s left. This type of rainforest is home to iconic and threatened plants and animals including Lumholtz’s Tree-Kangaroo, and to over 100 bird species.”

Vine removed from 50+ hectares of forest

Terrain NRM has funded Barron Catchment Care to work with landholders and turbina specialists, NQ Land Management Services, on a vine removal project that began last month and will continue until mid-2026.

NQ Land Management Services’ Geoff Onus said turbina was a “sleeper weed” until Cyclone Larry allowed it to take hold in 2006.

“We’ve had removal projects since that have put a big hole in its progress but we now know the seeds can remain viable for about 10 years. In this project, we’ve been working on the edges of forest, and further in, hand-pulling the smaller patches, cutting larger vines at the base and applying herbicide, and blanket spraying larger infestation areas.

A chance for Mabi Forest to regenerate

“It’s a tough job, walking and sometimes crawling through the forest in a grid pattern with five metre spacings. But it’s rewarding. There are more infestations than we can tackle through this project but what we are doing here is giving these outlying areas of forest some breathing space, freeing them from vines and giving them a chance to regenerate.”

Landholder Will Cairns has welcomed the project, which follows his own work to remove turbina from a largely rainforest property that he and his partner Andi have owned for four years.

“This is a woody vine that can grow to be as thick as your leg, or more, so it’s good to have some help with it,’’ he said. “Now this work is happening, it’s important to have buy-in from everyone, to try and stop turbina’s spread into rare and endangered habitat.”

Working on six properties

The work is happening on six private properties in the Atherton-Yungaburra region and on council land at Picnic Crossing Reserve. It complements removal work on national park land as part of Queensland Parks and Wildlife Service operations.

Terrain NRM’s Tony O’Malley said the Mabi Action Group had met last year to discuss Mabi Forest values and threats, with turbina control emerging as the priority.

He said the Forest Resilience project was funding weed and pest control, fire management, wildlife-friendly fencing, revegetation and conservation agreements in four threatened ecological communities in the Wet Tropics region – Mabi forest, lowland rainforest, littoral rainforest and broad leaf tea-tree woodlands – and in wet sclerophyll forest and rainforest uplands.

Support for 20 Forest Resilience projects across the Wet Tropics

“Terrain NRM is currently supporting 20 of these Forest Resilience projects across the region. Groups are working together to restore threatened ecosystems which, in turn, improve habitat for threatened species.”

The Forest Resilience project is funded by the Australian Government’s Saving Native Species program. This project is in the Threatened Species Action Plan’s Eastern forests of Far North Queensland priority place.

If you have identified Turbina vine on your property and would like advice on how best to manage it, get in touch with Barron Catchment Care by emailing coordinator@barronrivercatchment.org.au

RELATED NEWS

Mangrove Buffers

Mangrove Buffers

Biodiversity Template 1
Protecting critical infrastructure on our shorelines
Read More
Spectacled Flying-foxes – FAQS

Spectacled Flying-foxes – FAQS

Biodiversity Template 1
Answers to your community survey questions
Read More
Mabi Forest

Mabi Forest

Biodiversity Template 1
Download our new booklet on this endangered forest type.
Read More
1 2 3 34