Adelaide and Mount Lofty Ranges - Regional Recovery Pilot
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Southern Brown Bandicoot Isoodon obesulus obesulus
Photo: K Long |
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Stiff White Spider-orchid Caladenia rigida
Photo: J Quarmby |
Traditionally, the planning and management of threatened species
recovery has been based on a single-species approach. This approach
(and more recently multi-species recovery for plants) has seen a
number of successful programs implemented for threatened species
in the State. However, it has long been recognised that there is
a limit to the rate at which recovery plans can be developed (for
an increasing number of threatened species), and that alternative
approaches need to be explored to better integrate recovery planning
and management actions.
The Regional Recovery Pilot for the Adelaide and Mount Lofty Ranges
is about developing and testing a more integrated approach to recovery
and threat abatement planning at the regional scale.
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Black-chinned Honeyeater Melithreptus gularis
Photo: D Paton |
The outcome of the Regional Recovery Pilot will be a multi-taxa
recovery plan that incorporates and integrates prioritised recovery
and threat abatement actions for many of the threatened species
and ecological communities within the Adelaide and Mount Lofty Ranges
region. It is hoped that this approach will provide more efficient
and effective outcomes, and make better use of limited resources.
The pilot is being developed as a partnership between the Australian
Government Department of the Environment and Water Resources
(AGDEW), the Adelaide
and Mount Lofty Ranges Natural Resource Management Board (AMLR
NRM) and the South Australian Department for Environment and Heritage
(SADEH).
The project has a Steering Committee comprised of both DEH and
external representatives. The committee together with project staff
have prepared a consultation strategy. Input from key stakeholders
will be sought throughout the development of the plan.
The Regional Recovery Pilot is one of several pilot projects being
undertaken in Australia to test the feasibility of this integrated
regional recovery and threat abatement plan approach.
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here for larger version of Adelaide and Mount Lofty Ranges
Recovery Plan Pilot Regional Boundary map |
The project area is the same as the draft
Greater Mount Lofty Biodiversity Plan. This area is based on
bioregional boundaries, and crosses NRM regional boundaries, incorporating
the AMLR NRM Board area and the western flank of the Murray Darling
Basin NRM Board area.
The Adelaide and Mount Lofty Ranges (AMLR) is a complex and biologically
diverse region covering over 685,000 ha. The region comprises land
under a variety of tenures and land uses ranging from housing and
industry, conservation, horticulture and dry-land farming. Despite
significant land clearance and habitat fragmentation across much
of the landscape, the region supports a number of areas of remnant
native vegetation (covering approximately 91,000 ha) and many native
plant and animal species. However, the threats are considerable
- many species have become extinct or are declining. Some species
are unique to the AMLR region and occur nowhere else in the world.
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Skeleton Fork-fern Psilotum nudum
Photo: P Lang |
The metropolitan area of Adelaide supports over one million people,
and the surrounding peri-urban area of the Mount Lofty Ranges is
the most densely populated region in SA. Because of this and ongoing
development, the significant biodiversity which remains in the landscape
is under increasing pressure from a variety of threatening processes.
Many species are at continued risk of decline because the vegetation
remnants are fragmented and isolated, affecting their ability to
sustain species in the long term. Other threats include incremental
loss of vegetation, invasion of pest plants and animals, inappropriate
fire regimes and disease. Many threatened species are at risk of
becoming either locally extinct or extinct across their whole range.
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Silver
Daisy-bush Olearia pannosa
ssp. pannosa
Photo: P Lang |
Scope of the Plan
The project will include (as a minimum) all species and ecological
communities listed as threatened under the Commonwealth Environment
Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 (excluding
marine and coastal species). The plan will also include many species
listed under the National
Parks and Wildlife Act 1972 .
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Grassy
Woodland
Photo: A Hurren |
The plan will include information profiles on threatened species
and communities and incorporate integrated recovery actions. The
threat abatement component will address key threats, linkages and
management priorities across those threatened species and ecological
communities. Development of the plan will involve compiling, checking,
and building on existing threatened species information, particularly
from existing recovery plans. The plan will be prepared in accordance
with the Australian
Government Department for the Environment and Water Resources Recovery
Planning Guidelines.
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Cunningham's
Skink Egernia cunninghani
Photo: P Robertson |
Anticipated outcomes of the Regional Recovery Pilot are:
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A recovery plan that aims to meet the requirements for adoption
under the Commonwealth
Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999;
- Improvements in the quality, efficiency and effectiveness of
regional management of threatened species including on-ground
threat abatement;
- Increased capacity of the AMLR NRM Board and surrounding NRM
boards to incorporate threatened species recovery and threat abatement
actions into regional NRM plans and investment strategies;
- Improved information sources on threatened species and communities
in AMLR.
The project is funded by the AMLR NRM Board through the Australian
Government's Natural Heritage Trust. The Department for Environment and Heritage
is managing the project on behalf of the AMLR NRM Board.
The AMLR Regional Recovery Project commenced in late 2006 and will
continue until June 2008. The draft plan should be available for
a three-month public comment period during the first half of 2008.
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Veined Sun-orchid Thelymitra cyanea
Photo: M Houston |
An information tool will be developed to assist the retrieval of
information about threatened species/ecological communities occurring
in the AMLR region. The project team would like your feedback to
help determine what form of 'tool' you would find most useful and
easiest to access. For example, combining all available information
for AMLR threatened species, perhaps accessible through a map-based
website, may be beneficial for planners, managers and students.
Your feedback is
appreciated.
Andrew Willson, Department for Environment and Heritage,
Adelaide Region.
Julia Bignall, Department for Environment and Heritage,
Adelaide Region.
Andrew Willson,
Project Leader, Adelaide and Mount Lofty Ranges Regional Recovery
Pilot, Department for Environment and Heritage
Ph: (08) 8336 0929.
Regular project updates will be available for download.
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