Protected areas of Australia
Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Protected areas of Australia include Commonwealth and off-shore protected areas managed by the Australian government, as well as protected areas within each of the six states of Australia and two self-governing territories, the Australian Capital Territory and the Northern Territory, which are managed by the eight state and territory governments.
Commonwealth and off-shore protected areas in the Australian Capital Territory, the Northern Territory, the Christmas Island Territory, the Cocos (Keeling) Islands Territory, the Norfolk Island Territory and the Australian Antarctic Territory are managed by Parks Australia, a division of the Department of the Environment, with the exception of the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park, which is managed by the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority, a separate body within the department.
Protected areas cover 895,288 km² of Australia's land area, or about 11.5% of the total land area. The Australian Capital Territory has the highest level of protection at nearly 55% of its territory, followed by Tasmania with nearly 40% and South Australia with 25%. Lowest level of protection is in Queensland and the Northern Territory with less than 6%.[1] Of all protected areas, two-thirds are considered strictly protected (IUCN categories I to IV), and the rest is mostly managed resources protected area (IUCN category VI). Over 80% of the protected area in Australia is publicly owned and managed by the Australian government or state and territory governments. The second largest component of protected areas are the Indigenous Protected Areas while only 0.3% are privately owned.[2]
Contents
- 1 Protected areas managed by the Australian government
- 1.1 National Parks
- 1.2 Botanical Gardens
- 1.3 Specially Protected Areas (part of the Antarctic Treaty Areas)
- 1.4 Special Scientific Interest Sites (part of the Antarctic Treaty Areas)
- 1.5 Marine reserves
- 1.5.1 South-West Network of Commonwealth Marine Reserves
- 1.5.2 North-West Network of Commonwealth Marine Reserves
- 1.5.3 North Network of Commonwealth Marine Reserves
- 1.5.4 Coral Sea Commonwealth Marine Reserve
- 1.5.5 Temperate East Network of Commonwealth Marine Reserves
- 1.5.6 South East Network of Commonwealth Marine Reserves
- 1.5.7 The Heard Island and McDonald Islands Marine Reserve
- 1.6 Calperum and Taylorville Stations
- 1.7 Historic Shipwrecks with protected zones
- 2 Protection arising from Australian government policy and international treaty obligations
- 3 Protected areas managed by Australian states and territories
- 4 See also
- 5 References
- 6 External links
Protected areas managed by the Australian government
The following list shows only the Commonwealth and off-shore protected areas that are managed by the Australian government which represents a small portion of all protected areas located in Australia. Each state and territory is responsible for the management of the protected areas under its jurisdiction with exception to protected areas such as the Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park in the Northern Territory. The majority of Australian protected areas are managed by the state and territory governments.
National Parks
The following protected areas which are designated as national parks are managed by the Australian government and in some instances in conjunction with indigenous land owners:[3]
Australia's first national park - and the second in the world - is Royal National Park in New South Wales, established in 1879.[4]
Botanical Gardens
Specially Protected Areas (part of the Antarctic Treaty Areas)
Special Scientific Interest Sites (part of the Antarctic Treaty Areas)
Marine reserves
The Australian Government manages an estate of marine protected areas known as Commonwealth marine reserves (CMR) which was established under the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 (EPBC Act).[7][8]
South-West Network of Commonwealth Marine Reserves
The South-west Commonwealth Marine Reserve Network consists of the following reserves - Abrolhos, Jurien, Two Rocks, Perth Canyon, Geographe, South-west Corner, Eastern Recherche, Twilight, Bremer, Great Australian Bight, Murat, Western Eyre, Western Kangaroo Island and Southern Kangaroo Island.[9]
North-West Network of Commonwealth Marine Reserves
The North-west Commonwealth Marine Reserve Network consists of the following reserves - Carnarvon Canyon, Shark Bay, Gascoyne, Ningaloo, Montebello, Dampier, Eighty Mile Beach, Argo-Rowley Terrace, Mermaid Reef, Roebuck, Kimberley, Ashmore Reef and Cartier Island.[10]
North Network of Commonwealth Marine Reserves
The North Commonwealth Marine Reserve Network consists of the following reserves - Oceanic Shoals, Joseph Bonaparte Gulf, Arafura, Arnhem, Wessel, Limmen, Gulf of Carpentaria and West Cape York.[11]
Coral Sea Commonwealth Marine Reserve
The Coral Sea Commonwealth Marine Reserve covers part of the Coral Sea immediately east of the Great Barrier Reef.[12]
Temperate East Network of Commonwealth Marine Reserves
The Temperate East Commonwealth Marine Reserve Network consists of the following reserves - Jervis, Hunter, Cod Grounds, Solitary Islands, Central Eastern, Gifford, Lord Howe and Norfolk.[13]
South East Network of Commonwealth Marine Reserves
The South-east Commonwealth Marine Reserve Network consists of the following reserves - Apollo, Beagle, Boags, East Gippsland, Flinders, Franklin, Freycinet, Huon, Macquarie Island, Murray, Nelson, South Tasman Rise, Tasman Fracture and Zeehan.[14]
The Heard Island and McDonald Islands Marine Reserve
The Heard Island and McDonald Islands Marine Reserve covers the waters surrounding the Heard Island and McDonald Islands.[15]
Calperum and Taylorville Stations
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Calperum and Taylorville Stations are pastoral leases located next to each other near Renmark in South Australia and which were purchased for conservation purposes using both private and Australian government funds. Calperum Station was purchased by the Chicago Zoological Society in 1993 while Taylorville Station was purchased by the Australian Landscape Trust in 2000 with the ownership of both leases being deeded to the Director of National Parks. Both properties are managed by the Australian Landscape Trust.[16][17]
Historic Shipwrecks with protected zones
The following historic shipwrecks lie within protected or no-entry zones declared under the Historic Shipwrecks Act 1976 for protection and management purposes.[18]
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- Aarhus
- SS Alert
- Bega (1908)
- Cato
- AHS Centuar
- Clonmel
- SMS Emden
- Foam
- Florence D
- SS Glenelg
- SS Gothenburg
- HSK Kormoran
- Lady Darling
- Llewellyn
- Submarine M24
- HMCS Mermaid
- HMS Pandora
- HMS Porpoise
- Sanyo Maru[19]
- Submarine I-124
- HMAS Sydney
- SS Yongala
- VOC Zuytdorp
Protection arising from Australian government policy and international treaty obligations
World Heritage listed areas
- Australian Fossil Mammal Sites (Riversleigh/Naracoorte)
- Gondwana Rainforests of Australia, formerly Central Eastern Rainforest Reserves
- Fraser Island
- Great Barrier Reef
- Greater Blue Mountains Area
- Heard and McDonald Islands
- Kakadu National Park
- Lord Howe Island
- Macquarie Island
- Purnululu National Park
- Shark Bay
- Tasmanian Wilderness
- Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park
- Wet Tropics of Queensland
- Willandra Lakes Region
Source: UNESCO [20]
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Ramsar sites
As a contracting party to the Convention on Wetlands of International Importance (known as the Ramsar Convention), Australia is encouraged "to nominate sites containing representative, rare or unique wetlands, or that are important for conserving biological diversity, to the List of Wetlands of International Importance".[21] As of March 2014, the Australian Government has nominated 65 Ramsar sites.[22]
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Biosphere reserves
The following biosphere reserves belonging to the UNESCO World Biosphere Reserve program are located within Australia:[23]
- Croajingolong, Victoria (1977)
- Riverland, South Australia (1977)
- Kosciuszko, New South Wales (1977)
- Prince Regent River, Western Australia (1977)
- Mamungari (formerly Unnamed), South Australia (1977)
- Uluru (Ayers Rock-Mount Olga), Northern Territory (1977)
- Yathong (1977)
- Fitzgerald River, Western Australia (1978)
- Hattah-Kulkyne & Murray-Kulkyne, Victoria (1981)
- Wilsons Promontory, Victoria (1981)
- Mornington Peninsula and Western Port, Victoria (2002)
- Barkindji, New South Wales (2005)
- Noosa, Queensland (2007)
- Great Sandy, Queensland (2009)
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Indigenous protected areas
An indigenous protected area (IPA) is a class of protected area formed by agreement with Indigenous Australians and formally recognised by the Australian government as being part of the National Reserve System. As of August 2013, 60 IPAs with a total area of 48,000,000 hectares (120,000,000 acres) have been declared.[24][25]
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Protected areas managed by Australian states and territories
Refer:
- Protected areas of the Australian Capital Territory
- Protected areas of New South Wales
- Protected areas of the Northern Territory
- Protected areas of Queensland
- Protected areas of South Australia
- Protected areas of Tasmania
- Protected areas of Victoria
- Protected areas of Western Australia
See also
- Australia's National Reserve System
- Australian Whale Sanctuary
- Conservation park (Australia)
- List of national parks of Australia
- National parks of Western Australia
- Wild Rivers
References
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External links
de:Nationalparks in Australienit:Aree protette dell'Australia Occidentale
- ↑ Australian Government:State and territory levels of protection, retrieved 2009-09-22
- ↑ Australian Government: Ownership of protected areas, retrieved 2009-09-22
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- ↑ Australian Government: National Reserve System, retrieved 2009-09-22
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- ↑ 'Historic shipwreck protected zones,' http://www.environment.gov.au/heritage/shipwrecks/protected-zones.html, retrieved 14/08/2012.
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- ↑ UNESCO, retrieved 2009-09-22
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