Forest resilience workshops

FOREST RESILIENCE WORKSHOPS

JANUARY 2025

What’s the best action for us to take to improve our threatened ecological communities?
We have four in the Wet Tropics region that are nationally listed as threatened – Mabi forest on the Atherton Tablelands, lowland rainforest and littoral rainforest from Bloomfield to Ingham and broad leaf tea-tree woodlands between Tully and Ingham.

Terrain NRM has received $2.25 million in funding from the Australian Government to help in the recovery of these ecological communities, so we’ve been holding workshops with people who specialise in each of them, and who manage the land in areas including these habitats.

Terrain is also co-hosting workshops on wet sclerophyll forest and rainforest uplands because they’ve recently been identified by scientists as priority ecosystems in the Far North as well.

Designing projects – from invasive species to tree-planting and fire management 

We are working with partners to design a series of on-ground projects. They will include feral animal and weed control work, revegetation work, wildlife-friendly fencing and fire management. They could also include helping willing landholders with voluntary conservation agreements for their properties.

The people involved include threatened species recovery group members, scientists, traditional owners, other land managers and representatives from local, state and federal government agencies.

We’ve completed four workshops – in Cairns, Cardwell and Atherton. The other two are coming up soon – on littoral rainforest and upland rainforest.

These workshops, and upcoming on-ground projects, are part of the “Forest Resilience – Improving Condition of Eastern Forests of Far North Queensland (Wet Tropics bioregion) Through Strategic Collaborative Action” project. It is funded by the Australian Government’s Saving Native Species program.

Taking an eco-system approach to projects

Terrain NRM’s Tony O’Malley says taking an ecosystem approach is important.

“We won’t just be focusing on one species– this project has an entire ecosystem approach for the benefit of all the species living there.”

Consultant Steve Skull, who was part of the broad-leafed tea-tree woodlands workshop, agrees that’s important.

“It has been fantastic to see how many people are engaged in work linked to woodlands, and to see how much better understood its importance has become over the years. We now know just how many important species and processes these woodlands support and it is good to see they are getting some much-needed attention.”

Carla Catterall who is part of the wet sclerophyll forest and rainforest upland workshops and is a professor in ecology and environment at Griffith University and a member of the Wet Tropics Management Authority’s Scientific Advisory Committee, says combining local knowledge and scientific principles is important.

“This project is the first step of many needed to preserve and restore these ecosystems. It will be a collection of smaller projects – a combination of what’s important to do and what the community can do, guided by local knowledge and the best scientific information.”

The wet sclerophyll workshop was run in conjunction with the Wet Tropics Management Authority, which is re-examining values, threats and management responses in the greater Wet Tropics bioregion and beyond. This follows a listing by the Australian Government of the ‘Eastern Forest of Far North Queensland’ as a priority place under its Threatened Species Action Plan 2022-2032.

The Authority’s Terry Carmichael says collaboration is the key to recovering threatened species.

“Through these close collaborations between government and non-government, organisations can work together to try and stem the tide of biodiversity loss in this the most biodiverse and precious landscape in Australia.”

FAST FACTS:

This project is funding on-ground action in six forest ecosystems which support threatened flora and fauna species. It takes a landscape-scale approach to reducing threats and supporting recovery actions.

An ‘ecological community’ is a group of species commonly found together. It’s a naturally-occurring group of native plants, animals and other organisms that interact in a unique habitat that’s determined by things like soil type, position in the landscape, altitude, climate and water availability.

The ‘Eastern Forest of Far North Queensland’ is one of 20 priority places identified under the Australian Government’s Threatened Species Action Plan 2022-2032. This ‘priority place’ extends from Townsville to Cape Melville and inland beyond the Atherton Tablelands.

Find out more about the ‘Forest Resilience – Improving Condition of Eastern Forests of Far North Queensland project here.

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