Foundation for National Parks & Wildlife
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OUR PROJECTS
Land Aquisition
Plants & Wildlife
 

Land Mammals
Koala
Platypus
Bridled Nail-tail Wallaby
Brush-tailed Rock-wallaby
Yellow-footed Rock-wallaby
Swamp Wallaby
Rufous Rat-kangaroo
Tiger Quoll
Long-footed Potoroo
Long-nosed Bandicoot
Southern Brown Bandicoot
Mountain Pygmy-possum
Western Pygmy-possum
Brush-tailed Phascogale
Grey-headed Flying Fox
Hastings River Mouse
Marine Mammals
Humpback Whale
Bottle-nosed Dolphin
Amphibians & Reptiles

Frog conservation
Corroborree Frog
Green Tree Frog
Wallum Froglet
Green and Golden Bell Frog
Invertebrates
Mitchell's Rainforest Snail
Lord Howe Island Land Snail
Birds
Lord Howe Island Woodhen
Lord Howe Island Currawong
Gould's Petrel
Little Tern
Sooty Oystercatcher
Little (Fairy) Penguin
Rufous Scrub-bird
Mallee Fowl
Regent Parrot
Superb Parrot
Falcon
Osprey
Bush Stone-Curlew
Plants
Allocasuarina portuensis

Greenhood Orchid

Grevillea caleyi
Wollemi Pine

Habitat Conservation
Cultural Heritage
Environmental Education
Foundation Tracks
   

Mountain Pygmy Possum - Photo Linda BroomePlant & Wildlife Conservation

Although Australia holds a sad world-record of species extinction over the past two centuries, it is not too late to save our threatened plants and animals.

765 species are threatened in NSW alone and many species, especially insects, invertebrates and plants become extinct before even being scientifically described.

The Foundation raises and directs funds towards projects that fight the major threats to our species – habitat loss, introduced pests and lacking knowledge of our wild creatures’ needs.

Our Threatened Species funds are used for

  • Research on why many species are disappearing and what is needed to bring them back from the brink of extinction
  • Habitat regeneration
  • Land acquisition for habitat
  • Pest eradication
  • Short- as well as long-term threatened species recovery projects

Our appeals raise about one million dollars on average each year and have saved the Lord Howe Woodhen, the Gould's Petrel and the Yellow-footed Rock Wallaby and other unique species from extinction.

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