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Wild Horse Creek riparian fencing - Bridled Nailtail Wallaby corridor

Website/Report

(not documented)

Project lead

Partnerships

(not documented)

Industries

Conservation

Activities

On-ground work

Case study type

(none)

Funding source

(not documented)

Funding amount

(not documented)

In-kind contribution

(not documented)

Start date

1 March 2015

End date

31 October 2015

Summary

The proposed riparian fencing on Wild Horse Creek will create a corridor to Taunton National Park and provide additional habitat for the endangered Bridled Nailtail Wallaby (BNTW). This project is a continuation of the riparian fencing on Rockview which directly neighbours Taunton National Park (scientific), home of the largest wild population of BNTW's in Australia. Riparian fencing on Wild Horse Creek will reduce cattle grazing pressure to create a corridor to Taunton National Park via Rockview.

Benefits

The project will provide additional habitat for the endangered Bridled Nailtail Wallaby by fencing off riparian areas from cattle grazing along Wild Horse Creek which flows into Taunton National Park (scientific).

Lesson

(not documented)

Reference ID

(none)

Last updated: 24 September 2019

This page should be cited as:

Department of Environment, Science and Innovation, Queensland (2019) Wild Horse Creek riparian fencing - Bridled Nailtail Wallaby corridor, WetlandInfo website, accessed 20 December 2024. Available at: https://wetlandinfo.des.qld.gov.au/wetlands/resources/tools/wetland-project/wild-horse-creek-riparian-fencing-bridled-nailtail-wallaby-corridor-6c96/

Queensland Government
WetlandInfo   —   Department of the Environment, Tourism, Science and Innovation