Our regional reach
We work across Queensland’s diverse bioregions with targeted strategies for effective conservation and improved biodiversity.
Queensland has 13 bioregions, from coast to desert and tropics to cool southern highlands. Each has its own landscape patterns, climate zones and distinct groups of plants and animals.
At QTFN, we focus on ecologically significant spaces, species and wildlife corridors across these bioregions for maximum impact – working on private, public, QTFN-owned and Traditional Owners’ land.
Brigalow Belt
Cape York Peninsula
Central Queensland Coast
Spaces:Avoid Island Nature Refuge
Species:Flatback Turtle
Channel Country
Desert Uplands
Einasleigh Uplands
Gulf Plains
Mitchell Grass Downs
Mulga Lands
New England Tableland
Species:Brush-Tailed Rock-Wallaby, Koala
North West Highlands
South East Queensland
Spaces:Aroona Station, Koala Crossing
Species:Brush-Tailed Rock-Wallaby, Grey-Headed Flying-Fox, Koala
Wet Tropics
Spaces:, Cassowary Connection Nature Refuge, Daintree Lot 83, Gurrbum Nature Refuge
Species:Ant Plant, Cassowary, Mahogany Glider
Action & Insight
The right kind of fire: building our landscapes’ resilience
Feathery-soft cool ash sits in my palm, disintegrating as it falls through my fingers. It was part of the lantana (Lantana camara) on fire not long ago, but now as it returns to the ground it will become a cover for regenerating species. Around me, a haze rises through the canopy, thin, pale clouds that […]
New plantings will help form a continuous habitat corridor from the creek to the ridges
Great to see the final plantings for round 2 of our Koala Habitat Restoration Partnership Program (KHRPP) in the ground! In the first photo you can see the new plantings in the foreground, previous KHRPP revegetation in the middle, and Queensland Blue Gum regional ecosystems 12.3.7 and the endangered 12.3.3. in the back. This picture, […]
Hosting NBRUC at Aroona
There’s real value when you look on-ground and ask honest questions about what environmental markets in action really takes, sharing with a group of graziers, researchers, policy makers and knowledge brokers. On 13 March, QTFN opened the gates of Aroona Station to attendees of the Northern Beef Research Update Conference. We had some insightful discussions […]