Principles of bush regeneration
A Coastal Wetlands Park and Green Corridor
A previous TIN Topic mentioned briefly the work of the Coastal
Wetlands Park Support Group whose aim is "to seek the long term
security of the coastal wetlands and dunes, tributaries and buffer zones as part of a complex
interconnection of remnant natural areas of state and possibly
international significance, complementing the already recognised
estuarine and salt marsh wetlands on the Hunter River at
Newcastle." (Coastal Wetlands Park Brochure)
Saving What's Left
Perhaps the best aspect of a natural resource officer's job is visiting
the numerous sites that people are working across the local area,
noting the environmental improvements as a result of onground
activities and realizing the tremendous collective commitment that
individuals are making to the preservation of the area's natural
environment.
To mulch or not to mulch?
Mulch is good, mulch is great but beware the natives don't suffocate.
The Replacement of Weeds
The best regeneration strategies for both flora and fauna are long
term. This is not to say that we just accept the weeds on our sites
because they are providing habitat or food source for native fauna, or
preventing erosion, or maintaining continuous canopy cover in a
wildlife corridor, or providing shade and shelter in an otherwise bare landscape.
The Importance of Weeds
An often quoted definition of a weed is a “plant growing in the wrong
place.” In one sense this is true, because from a Landcarers’ point of
view, many such plants are exotic species growing in native bushland.
In many other ways though, the definition is wrong; the weed is a plant
growing in the right place, otherwise it wouldn’t be surviving as
vigorously as it is.



