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CALM AND BUSH FOREVER IMPLEMENTATION. 9 June 2006 David Mitchell Department of Conservation and Land Management. OUTLINE. Current Situation. Manager of Conservation Estate . Off-reserve and Advisory programs. Future. Issues and topics for discussion. In 2000
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CALM AND BUSH FOREVER IMPLEMENTATION 9 June 2006 David Mitchell Department of Conservation and Land Management
OUTLINE. • Current Situation. • Manager of Conservation Estate. • Off-reserve and Advisory programs. • Future. • Issues and topics for discussion.
In 2000 Bush Forever identified 51,200 ha (287 sites). Remnant vegetation and Bush Forever Sites
CALM managed BF sites = 25,905 ha (102 sites). To date taken on an additional 4,100 ha Remnant vegetation, Bush Forever Sites and CALM estate
Urban Nature. • Provide technical advice, support and coordination of information for all bushland managers. • Identify and promote best practice bushland management • Capacity build bushland managers • Site specific advice and assistance • Focus on Bush Forever sites
Geraldton carnation weed in Paganoni Swamp Bush Forever Site 395 • Present around edges, requires management to prevent further invasion. • Workshops and workdays to raise awareness of the weed and its impacts • Brochures and information • Setting up trials to test herbicide effectiveness • Working with Friends, Perth Biodiversity Project, Regional Parks, and Rockingham Regional Environment Centre
Urban Nature: commitments for 2006. • Skills for Nature Conservation training courses. • Ecoplan News, quarterly • Continuing trials to determine best practice • Bushland management demonstration days at 3 BF sites • Urban Nature training courses • Nationally accredited week long weeds course • one day workshops • Contact rural landowners offering advice and copy of Bushland Weeds
Other Off-reserve Programs. • Voluntary Nature Conservation Covenants. • Land for Wildlife • Bushland Benefits • Direct specialist advice • Programs of other organisations • All “Opt-in” programs
THE FUTURE. Increased areas under management responsibility • To date taken on an additional 4,100 ha ($0). • land management responsibility rises from 25,900ha in 2000 to over 38,000ha by 2010. • Level of management effort varies over sites. • Reserve “design” and threats • Levels of public use
THE FUTURE. Costs of management. • CALM range from $20/ha to $900/ha. • Smaller urban reserves at higher end. • Local governments managing bushland (mostly smaller areas, high visitation) for $1,000/ha. • Capital/establishment costs 3-4 times higher • Revegetation and reconstruction is 10 to 100 times/ha.
THE FUTURE. Additional off-reserve need. • If CALM expects to manage 38,000ha or more – ie 73% of BF area. • This leaves 14,000ha (27%) not under direct CALM management: • Local Government – 3,400 ha • State Government – 2,000 + ha • Commonwealth Government – 4,800 ha • Rural private ownership – 2,800 ha • 100+ Friends Groups
THE FUTURE. The Gaps. • Delivery gaps – not all sites are in final management • Expectation gaps – what level of management, advice? • Process gaps – what mechanisms exist or need to exist? • Encouragement and incentives to private landowners. • Resource gap – to fund additional level of existing service and new services.