Recovery actions

The program’s recovery actions included:

Post-fire assessment

Detailed mapping was undertaken to determine the extent and severity of the fire in each location using remotely sensed imagery and field inspections.

Fire severity was determined using the following classifications.

Severity class Relative fire severity class description
Unburnt Unburnt, canopy and subcanopy unchanged (within the mapped extent)
Low Canopy and subcanopy unscorched, shrubs may be scorched, fire-sensitive low shrubs may be killed
Moderate Partial canopy scorch, subcanopy partially or completely scorched, and/or fire-sensitive tall shrub or small tree layer mostly killed
High Full canopy scorch to partial canopy consumption, subcanopy fully scorched or consumed
Extreme Full canopy, subcanopy and understorey consumption

Post-fire impacts can vary across ecosystems. For example, a low severity fire in a rainforest can have catastrophic ecological impacts given that the flora and fauna have evolved over millions of years without fire and have very limited or very slow capacity to recover. In comparison, a low severity fire in an open Eucalypt forest can have limited or no ecological impact as these ecosystems are fire-adapted, with species having well-evolved strategies to recover quickly from fire, or even require fire to germinate their seeds or provide core habitats or food resources.

Potential ecological impact maps were developed for each of the four locations to account for this difference between ecosystems. A spatial assessment of the fire severity and the type of vegetation was combined. These maps helped determine where direct on-ground recovery actions (such as species surveys, weed control or pest animal control) were most needed.

Species assessment

Species surveys were conducted for priority threatened species to detect priority threatened species in burnt habitats. Unburnt habitats were also surveyed as a comparison, to see if they were acting as a refuge. Surveys were also used to establish broader spatial distributions, relative population size and breeding status where possible.

The following priority species were surveyed.

ProjectGroup Common name Scientific name
Gondwana Mammal Brush-tailed rock-wallaby Petrogale penicillata
Gondwana Mammal New Holland mouse Pseudomys novaehollandiae
Gondwana Mammal Hastings River mouse Pseudomys oralis
Gondwana Mammal Spotted-tailed quoll Dasyurus maculatus maculatus
Gondwana Mammal Long-nosed Potoroo Potorous tridactylus tridactylus
Bulburin Mammal Silver-headed Antechinus Antechinus argentus
Gondwana Bird Albert's lyrebird Menura alberti
Gondwana Bird Glossy black-cockatoo Calyptorhynchus lathami
Gondwana Bird Eastern bristlebird Dasyornis brachypterus
Gondwana Bird Rufous scrub-bird Atrichornis rufescens
Gondwana Bird Coxen's Fig Parrot Cyclopsitta diophthalma coxeni
Cooloola Bird Ground parrot Pezoporus wallicus wallicus
Cooloola Bird Southern Emu-wren Stipiturus malachurus
Oakview Reptile Nangur spiny-skink Nangura spinosa
Oakview Reptile Oakview leaf-tailed gecko Phyllurus kabikabi
Bulburin Reptile Ringed thin-tailed gecko Phyllurus caudiannulatus
Cooloola Fish Honey blue eye Pseudomugil mellis
Cooloola Fish Oxleyan pygmy perch Nannoperca oxleyana
Gondwana Frog Cascade treefrog Litoria pearsoniana
Gondwana Frog Fleay's barred frog Mixophyes fleayi
Gondwana Frog Red-and-yellow mountain frog Philoria kundagungan
Cooloola Frog Wallum froglet Crinnia tinnula
Cooloola Frog Cooloola sedgefrog Litoria cooloolensis
Cooloola Frog Wallum rocketfrog Litoria freycineti
Cooloola Frog Wallum sedgefrog Litoria oblongburensis
Gondwana Plant  Agiortia cicatricata
Cooloola Plant Mt. Emu she-oak Allocasuarina emuina
Gondwana Plant  Bertya ernestiana
Gondwana Plant Binna Burra daisy Brachyscome ascendens
Gondwana Plant  Bulbophyllum weinthalii subsp.weinthalii
Gondwana Plant  Clematis fawcettii
Gondwana Plant  Comesperma breviflorum
Gondwana Plant coopernookia Coopernookia scabridiuscula
Gondwana Plant  Dendrobium schneiderae var.schneiderae
Cooloola Plant durringtonia Durringtonia paludosa
Gondwana Plant Lamington eyebright Euphrasia bella
Cooloola Plant  Gonocarpus effusus
Gondwana Plant  Gonocarpus hirtus
Gondwana Plant mountain guinea flower Hibbertia monticola
Gondwana Plant  Leionema elatius subsp.beckleri
Gondwana Plant  Leptospermum barneyense
Bulburin Plant Bulburin Nut Macadamia jansenii
Gondwana Plant  Muellerina myrtifolia
Gondwana Plant  Phlegmariurus varius
Gondwana Plant  Pimelea umbratica
Gondwana Plant  Pseudanthus pauciflorus subsp.pauciflorus
Gondwana Plant Mt. Barney bush pea Pultenaea whiteana
Gondwana Plant  Sarcochilus hartmannii
Gondwana Plant blotched sarcochilus Sarcochilus weinthalii
Cooloola Plant Fraser Island creeper Tecomanthe hillii
Gondwana Plant  Tetramolopium vagans
Gondwana Plant  Zieria montana

Threat management

Reducing key threats was critical to support the recovery of priority threatened species. This included threats in both burnt areas as well as unburnt areas which acted as refuges to help species re-establish populations or provide important food or breeding resources.

Protecting the unburnt refuges from future fires was a high priority. To improve access to these areas for a future bushfire emergency response, critical firelines were either installed or widened in key areas and weed control was undertaken along existing firelines to reduce potential fuel hazards.

Broader weed control actions were undertaken in burnt areas and included removing invasive grasses and weed species that readily colonise burnt habitats and alter their capacity to naturally regenerate.

Pest animal control or mitigation was undertaken with a focus on species that posed the greatest direct threat to priority threatened species including feral cats and foxes. The control of deer and feral pigs was also undertaken because they impact habitat in refuges and habitat under recovery. For example feral pigs turn over extensive areas of soil, damaging or eating seeds, germinating native seedlings and small native species.

A range of other species specific actions were undertaken to protect endemic populations of threatened species. included.

Outcomes

Phase 1 of the recovery program was completed in June 2021. The recovery actions delivered across the four, key bushfire-affected locations improved priority threatened species  immediate survival and long-term recovery.

Phase 2 of the recovery program was completed in  October 2022. Phase 2work continued delivery of important fire and pest management actions to support ecological recovery across the Gondwana World Heritage Area (Main Range, Lamington and Mt Barney National Parks) and the Cooloola section of the Great Sandy National Park. In addition  ecological monitoring regimes for the priority threatened species and ecosystems were established, collecting critical post-fire data to track recovery.

Read the full reports that summarise the efforts and results from both phases of the program.

Learn more about individual recovery projects and specific recovery actions and outcomes.