Peter Vesk’s team isn't just protecting individual threatened species – they’re working to protect entire communities of threatened species by conserving
their habitats.
“Threatened and endangered species need the right vegetation and resources throughout their lifecycle to survive, and when you’re dealing with habitats
you’re rarely just conserving one species – it’s often whole communities under threat,” says Associate Professor Peter Vesk from The University of Melbourne, who leads Project 1.2.
The project will focus on three critical habitats - Box Gum Grassy woodlands, the endangered Buloke Woodlands, Alpine Sphagnum Bogs and Associated
Fens.
“A lot of the large trees in the grassy box woodlands of South-East Australia have been cleared for agricultural development and will take hundreds
of years to be restored to their historic state, prior to European settlement.
“David Lindenmayer’s (ANU) group of researchers will focus on key structures like large old trees, which provide lots of flowers and large boughs.
The boughs fall off to create hollows that many threatened bird species depend on for breeding.
“As well as researching habitat revegetation, we’ll assess the effectiveness of 150 purpose-built nesting boxes for hollow-dependent bird species such
as the Brown Treecreeper, the Squirrel Glider and Brush-tailed Phascogale.”
Another way to improve habitats for threatened woodland birds, including White Browed Treecreepers, Swift Parrots and Jacky Winters, may be to manage
the thriving and disruptive noisy miner population.
“European settlement has changed the Australian landscape in a way that favours noisy miners – which hang around in family groups and are quite aggressive
in pushing other birds out of their territory. While they’re native, they’re contributing to the decline of other woodland birds,” says Professor Vesk.
“There have been calls for culling trials, but we need to know whether that would make a difference. It’s controversial as they’re native, but there
has been a lot research that shows a large number of noisy minors will lower numbers of other species - particularly the smaller birds.”
Further research will also take place into how to best accommodate reptiles in the Box Gum Grassy woodlands, which don’t seem to respond to revegetation,
led by Damien Michael from ANU.
“While much attention has gone into planting shrubs and trees for birds and arboreal mammals, reptiles just don’t use them, so we’ll work to better
understand features such as rocky outcrops and boulders.”
The group is also trying to work out how its understanding of woodlands in one part of the country might be applied to other areas.
“While there might be Blakely's Red Gum in NSW where there’s Grey Box or River Red Gum in Victoria, there will still be woodland spacing between them,
with grassy areas scattered between occasional scrubs.
“If we can generalise learnings across these woodlands we’ll be able to apply them to other places, make the best use of the research and limited taxpayer
resources.”
The second major focus for Project 1.2 is
the Pine-Buloke woodlands of Northwest Victoria – home to the Buloke or casuarina and Murray Pine.
“These trees are preferred food sources for the threatened Red-tailed Black Cockatoo, which uses its strong beak to get the seeds out of its large
woody fruits.
“While a lot of these trees have been cleared from the woodland for agriculture and cropping, there are some mature trees remaining in the Wyperfeld
National Park and we’re working with Parks Victoria to investigate why there aren’t younger trees growing to replace them.
“A major factor seems to be livestock, feral rabbits and kangaroos grazing the seedlings – as well as climate conditions. Kangaroos have a boom and
bust cycle, building up to high population densities and eating all the vegetation but then dying in large numbers when drought hits. Important vegetation
like casuarinas, cypress pines and rosewood just don’t have time to recover.
“We have two students starting at the University of Melbourne to better understand the grazing pressures in the region, and the best ways to give seedlings
a chance of growing up to become mature trees.
“One of the students will be investigating whether there’s a good remote sensing tool to test the availability of foliage for kangaroos and the potential
pressures they may apply to seedlings.”
The third key component to the project will be prioritising the many threats to habitats in the Alpine bogs and Fens – led by Dr Joslin Moore from
Monash University.
“There areas are home to many threatened plant and animal communities, and are facing a number of threats listed in the Federal Department of Environment’s
recent action that include weeds, feral deer and brumbies. We’ll be working with Parks Victoria and the NSW Department of Environment to prioritise
actions on these threats.”
Partnerships like this are a big part of Project 1.2, and the Threatened Species Recovery Hub in general.
“It’s about making the most of the available knowledge and resources. We’re partnering with organisations on the ground such as Greening Australia
and Parks Victoria and will eventually expand to work with the NSW Office of Environment and Heritage and SA Department of Environment. We’re building
a strong research community.”
Image credit: White Box, Yellow Box Woodland, Goolmah (NSW Grassy Ecosystems, Flickr CC BY-SA 2.0)
Many landscapes in Australia are fire-prone, and increasingly so. Altered fire regimes can have a serious negative impact on threatened plant species and ecological communities. A Threatened Species Recovery Hub project is working to better understand the effects of different fire regimes on threatened flora in order to improve fire management strategies and conservation outcomes.
Almost a quarter of Australia’s possums and gliders are listed as threatened under Australian environmental law, and many more are showing signs of decline. Dr Rochelle Steven from The University of Queensland believes people in the community can do a lot to support conservation, especially in urban areas.
The detection and monitoring of threatened species have been a strong area of research in the National Environmental Science Program and also the two national environmental research programs which preceded it. Hub Director Professor Brendan Wintle takes a look at what we’ve been achieving and why it is so important to the conservation of Australia’s threatened species.
In 2009, the Christmas Island blue-tailed skink and Lister’s gecko were headed for imminent extinction. Parks Australia acted quickly to collect remaining wild individuals in order to establish captive breeding programs on Christmas Island and at Taronga Zoo, Sydney, which have been highly successful. A Threatened Species Recovery Hub project team is working closely with Parks Australia to help secure a future for the two lizards beyond captivity.
The silver-headed antechinus and black-tailed dusky antechinus are carnivorous marsupials found in high-elevation forests in parts of central-eastern and south-eastern Queensland. They were only described in the past six years, but they are already listed as Endangered. Knowing where they occur is essential for effective conservation, but current distribution knowledge is patchy. To address this, PhD candidate Stephane Batista in partnership with the Queensland Herbarium and Queensland Department of Environment and Science is modelling the habitat where these threatened species are likely to occur, and is using detection dogs to rapidly survey these sites.