 |
POST-CONFERENCE FIELD TRIP
| Field Trip Leader: |
Professor Grant Wardell-Johnson |
| Dates: |
28-31 August 2009 |
| Meeting Place: |
Perth Convention Exhibition Centre, Main Entrance on Level 1 |
| Meeting Time: |
8.00am for 8.30am departure |
| Cost: |
$850 AUD (twin share accommodation)
$1,000 AUD (single accommodation)
Fee includes all transport, accommodation, entrance fees, food
and refreshments. |
| Availability: |
Strictly limited to 55 participants. |

The tour will encapsulate restoration activities
and the natural beauty of the southern regions of southwest Western
Australia. Traversing from the jarrah forest on the Darling Plateau
to the dryandra woodlands, the botanically diverse Stirling Range
National Park and the karri forests in the far south, the tour will
highlight many of the states ecosystems and challenges facing restoration
practitioners.
Day 1: Perth - Boulder Rock - Pingelly - Dryandra Woodland - Barna
Mia animal Sanctuary - Narrogin
Day 1 will see the tour pass across the Canning River, travel up the
Araluen Valley and the Darling Scarp before climbing onto the Darling
Plateau and travelling through the jarrah (Eucalyptus marginata)
forest. Highlights will include Boulder Rock, a large granite outcrop
in the jarrah forest, Boyagin Rock and flowering plants of the rare
Eucalyptus caesia. Dryandra woodland is an especially scenic
area with magnificent powder-bark wandoo woodlands and spectacular
wildflowers in spring that once covered much of the Wheatbelt before
it was cleared for farming. Dryandra woodland is one of the prime
places in the southwest for viewing native wildlife. A predator-proof
compound containing core populations of western barred bandicoots,
banded hare-wallabies, boodies, bilbies and rufus hare-wallabies has
been built to provide a safe environment for breeding. An evening
walk through the Barna Mia animal sanctuary, located in the heart
of the Dryandra woodland, enables visitors to observe threatened species
at close range, whilst also learning about the conservation management
principles.
Overnight in Narrogin
Day 2: Narrogin - Wagin - Cranbrook - Stirling
Ranges - Boxwood Hill - Albany
Day 2 will see the tour travel to Albany via Wagin, Cranbrook, the
Stirling Ranges, Boxwood Hill and the South Coast Highway. This day
will provide opportunities to view large scale restoration activities
(e.g. at the Wagin Lakes and the Gondwanalink Restoration plantings
at Chereninup near Boxwood Hill), botanically diverse areas (e.g.
Mount Talyuberlup, Stirling Ranges) and the Albany coastline. The
Gondwanalink is an ambitious restoration program aiming to reconnect
the landscape from the karri forest of the southwest corner to the
woodlands and mallee bordering the Nullarbor Plain. This landscape-scale
vision involves individuals and local, regional and national groups
working together to achieve reconnected country across south-western
Australia in which entire ecosystems, and the fundamental ecological
processes that underpin them, are restored and maintained. A further
highlight of today will be the Stirling Range National Park, home
to over 1500 recorded species of wildflowers and terrestrial orchids
that flower in Spring.
Overnight in Albany
Day 3: Albany - Walpole - Northcliffe - Pemberton
- Augusta
Day 3 will be spent traveling to Augusta via Walpole, Northcliffe,
Pemberton and Stewart Road. The tour will move through the generally
low-lying terrain of plantaganet sedimentary deposits (with occasional
granite outcrop, dominated by Albany blackbutt (Eucalyptus staeri)
and several species of Melaleuca) to granite country, where
karri (Eucalyptus diversicolor) and an outlying population
of yellow tingle (Eucalyptus guilfoylei) occurs, before returning
to low-lying terrain of sedimentary deposits. Highlights will be the
tingle forest on the Tree Top walk (Eucalyptus jacksonii, E. guifoylei)
with the Giant Tingle Tree, at 24 metres being the largest, living,
girthed eucalypt known in the world. Further highlights will be the
karri forest and inlet at Coalmine Beach, a pitcher plant swamp (Cephalotus
sp) at Walpole, karri forest near Pemberton and Cape Leeuwin Lighthouse
and surrounds.
Overnight in Augusta
Day 4: Augusta - Margaret River - Busselton -
Perth
On the final day of the tour we will be traveling to Margaret River
and Busselton, one of Australia's premier wine growing regions. Along
the Leeuwin Naturaliste Ridge in the Margaret River region, and beneath
the karri forest lie more than 100 caves. These caves belong to a
series of complex and fragile Karst systems which are landscapes formed
by the rapid drainage of water underground. A major highlight of Day
4 will be the restoration efforts within the tuart forest near Ludlow.
The Ludlow tuart forest is the only remaining tall tuart forest in
the world and is therefore one of the rarest ecosystems left on earth.
This will be followed by an example of fauna conservation on private
land involving Geocrinia (frog). The final stop on the trip
will be Lake Clifton - one of the few places in the world that support
thrombolites. Thrombolites are microbialites, which are rock-like
structures built by micro-organisms.
Arrive in Perth

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