Cool temperate rainforests dominated by ancient Myrtle Beech (Nothofagus cunninghamii), Sassafras (Athersperma moschatum) and Blackwood (Acacia melanoxylon) is a magical ecosystem found in moist gullies across the Great Forest National Park. This vegetation type is remnant of what was much more abundant across the supercontinent Gondwana  that existed 500-200 million years ago. The super continent consisted of South America, Africa, Madagascar, India, Antarctica, New Zealand, Australia, southern parts of New Guinea and bits of New Caledonia in one big land mass. Fossils of the Myrtle Beech (a dominant flowering rainforest plant type) have been found across many of the existing southern continents, including Antarctica! This suggests the climate once favoured this vegetation class and over a period of geological time the climate and landscape has changed dramatically causing a retraction of these now fragile ecosystems. As you drive across the landscape you will move through a mosaic of vegetation types with Cool Temperate Rainforest typically hugging waterways and being distinguishable by having a dense over story of  Myrtle Beech and a ground layer dominated by mosses.

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  • 01

    Proposed Parks

    We propose adding 355,000 hectares of protected forests to the Central Highlands of Victoria to form the Great Forest National Park

  • 02

    Existing Parks

    Currently there is only 170,000 hectares of parks and protected areas in the Central Highlands of Victoria

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Help support our work in expressing the conservation needs and compelling opportunities that we could address through the establishment of the Great Forest National Park for Victoria.

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FAQ

The Great Forest National Park is a large complex proposal, covering environmental impacts and the conservation of wildlife, economic benefits to the area and more. Visit our FAQ for more information.

Frequently Asked Questions
The traditional custodians of this country include the Bunurong (Boon Wurrung), Gunaikurnai, Taungurung (Daung warring) and Wurundjeri indigenous Australians. We acknowledge this land belongs to the sovereign people of the First Nations. This land was stolen from them and their sovereignty was never ceded. This park conservation plan is subject to ongoing discussions and approvals with relevant clans and corporations and fully supports and recognises all their cultural rights, control and access.

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Businesses can become brand partners for the project by supporting the Great Forest National Park initiative and pushing the proposed park to their audience.
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Adventure today Conserve for tomorrow