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Conservation of Threatened Flora in the Wild - Department of ...

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DEPARTMENT OF CONSERVATION AND LAND MANAGEMENT1. OPERATIONAL OBJECTIVESTATEMENT NO, 9CONSERVATION OF THREATENED FLORA IN THE WILDDECEMBER-1992To conserve threatened flora <strong>in</strong> <strong>the</strong> wild <strong>in</strong> Western Australia and to comply with Section 23F <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong><strong>Wild</strong>life <strong>Conservation</strong> Act.2. DEFINITIONSThe term 'threatened flora is used to mean any plant taxon which is threatened with ext<strong>in</strong>ction and declaredunder section 23F <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Wild</strong>life <strong>Conservation</strong> Act as "rare flora" (i.e. "is likely to become ext<strong>in</strong>ct or is rareor o<strong>the</strong>rwise <strong>in</strong> need <strong>of</strong> special protection")."Interim <strong>Wild</strong>life Management Guidel<strong>in</strong>es" means guidel<strong>in</strong>es approved by <strong>the</strong> Director <strong>of</strong> Nature<strong>Conservation</strong> for <strong>the</strong> management and protection <strong>of</strong> threatened or harvested taxa where no full <strong>Wild</strong>lifeManagement Program has been prepared."<strong>Wild</strong>life Management Program" means a publication produced by CALM provid<strong>in</strong>g detailed <strong>in</strong>formationand guidance for <strong>the</strong> management and protection <strong>of</strong> threatened or harvested species or groups <strong>of</strong> thosespecies. Programs for threatened taxa are sometimes referred to as "Species Recovery Plans".3. BACKGROUNDThe <strong>Department</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Conservation</strong> and Land Management has statutory responsibilities for endangered floraconservation. This is a major concern because:i) Western Australia has a flora that is exceptionally rich <strong>in</strong> localised and rareendemic plant species. Moreover, areas where rare species are concentratedco<strong>in</strong>cide predom<strong>in</strong>antly with <strong>the</strong> wheatbelt and o<strong>the</strong>r areas where <strong>the</strong>re hasbeen extensive clear<strong>in</strong>g or modification <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> native flora.ii)Section 23F <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Wild</strong>life <strong>Conservation</strong> Act prohibits <strong>the</strong> tak<strong>in</strong>g (<strong>in</strong>jury ordestruction) <strong>of</strong> declared threatened (rare) flora by any person on any landthroughout <strong>the</strong> State without <strong>the</strong> consent <strong>in</strong> writ<strong>in</strong>g <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> M<strong>in</strong>ister. A breach<strong>of</strong> this provision may lead to a f<strong>in</strong>e <strong>of</strong> up to $10 000. The flora provisions <strong>of</strong><strong>the</strong> Act are b<strong>in</strong>d<strong>in</strong>g on <strong>the</strong> Crown.Officers <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Department</strong> need to know how to identify declared threatened flora, to know where it occurs,and to know how best to manage it. Moreover, <strong>the</strong> Act prescribes that threatened flora be protected on allcategories <strong>of</strong> land throughout <strong>the</strong> State. Hence, <strong>the</strong> legislation requires <strong>of</strong>ficers <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Department</strong> to adviseand o<strong>the</strong>rwise deal with a broad spectrum <strong>of</strong> land owners and users. <strong>Threatened</strong> flora conservation is thus anissue <strong>of</strong> high public pr<strong>of</strong>ile, and one where <strong>the</strong> <strong>Department</strong>'s activities are subject to <strong>in</strong>tense public scrut<strong>in</strong>y.The Schedule <strong>of</strong> Declared Rare <strong>Flora</strong>The Schedule <strong>of</strong> Declared Rare (<strong>Threatened</strong>) <strong>Flora</strong> is reviewed annually.


2Plants which are protected flora declared under <strong>the</strong> <strong>Wild</strong>life <strong>Conservation</strong> Act may be recommended forgazettal as declared rare (threatened) flora if <strong>the</strong>y satisfy <strong>the</strong> follow<strong>in</strong>g criteria:I) The taxon (species, subspecies, variety) is well-def<strong>in</strong>ed, readily identified and represented by a voucherspecimen <strong>in</strong> a State or National Herbarium. It need not necessarily be formally described under conventions<strong>in</strong> <strong>the</strong> International Code <strong>of</strong> Botanical Nomenclature, but such a description is preferred and should beundertaken as soon as possible after list<strong>in</strong>g on <strong>the</strong> schedule.ii)iii)(a)Have been searched for thoroughly <strong>in</strong> <strong>the</strong> wild by competent botanistsdur<strong>in</strong>g <strong>the</strong> past five years <strong>in</strong> most likely habitats, accord<strong>in</strong>g toguidel<strong>in</strong>es approved by <strong>the</strong> Executive Director (see Appendix).Searches have established that <strong>the</strong> plant <strong>in</strong> <strong>the</strong> wild is ei<strong>the</strong>r:rare;or(b)<strong>in</strong> danger <strong>of</strong> ext<strong>in</strong>ction;or(c)deemed to be threatened and <strong>in</strong> need <strong>of</strong> special protection.(d) presumed ext<strong>in</strong>ct (ie <strong>the</strong> taxon has not been collected from <strong>the</strong> wild, or o<strong>the</strong>rwise verified, over <strong>the</strong> past50 years despite thorough search<strong>in</strong>g, or <strong>of</strong> which all known wild populations have been destroyed morerecently).iv)(a)(b)(c)In <strong>the</strong> case <strong>of</strong> hybrids, or suspected hybrids, <strong>the</strong> follow<strong>in</strong>g criteria mustalso be satisfied:<strong>the</strong>y must be a dist<strong>in</strong>ct entity, that is, <strong>the</strong> progeny are consistentwith<strong>in</strong> <strong>the</strong> agreed, taxonomic limits for that taxon group;<strong>the</strong>y must be self perpetuat<strong>in</strong>g, that is, not reliant on <strong>the</strong> parentstock for replacement; and<strong>the</strong>y are <strong>the</strong> product <strong>of</strong> a natural event, that is, both parents arenaturally occurr<strong>in</strong>g and cross fertilisation was by naturalmeans.(Plants which occur on land reserved for nature conservation may be considered less <strong>in</strong> need <strong>of</strong> specialprotection than those on land designated for o<strong>the</strong>r purposes.)The status <strong>of</strong> an threatened plant <strong>in</strong> cultivation has no bear<strong>in</strong>g on this matter. The legislation refers only to<strong>the</strong> status <strong>of</strong> plants <strong>in</strong> <strong>the</strong> wild.


Plants may be deleted from <strong>the</strong> schedule <strong>of</strong> declared rare (threatened) flora where:3(a)(b)(c)recent botanical survey as def<strong>in</strong>ed <strong>in</strong> (ii) above has shown that<strong>the</strong> taxon is not rare, <strong>in</strong> danger <strong>of</strong> ext<strong>in</strong>ction or o<strong>the</strong>rwise <strong>in</strong>need <strong>of</strong> special protection;<strong>the</strong> taxon is shown to be a hybrid that does not comply with <strong>the</strong><strong>in</strong>clusion criteria;<strong>the</strong> taxon is no longer threatened because it has beenadequately protected by reservation <strong>of</strong> land where it occurs, orbecause its population numbers have <strong>in</strong>creased beyond <strong>the</strong>danger po<strong>in</strong>t."Tak<strong>in</strong>g" <strong>Threatened</strong> <strong>Flora</strong>In <strong>the</strong> <strong>Wild</strong>life <strong>Conservation</strong> Act (subsection 6 (1)) <strong>the</strong> follow<strong>in</strong>gdef<strong>in</strong>ition is given: V*"to take" <strong>in</strong> relation to any flora <strong>in</strong>cludes to ga<strong>the</strong>r, pluck, cut, pull up, destroy, dig up, remove or <strong>in</strong>jure <strong>the</strong>flora or to cause or permit <strong>the</strong> same to be done by any means;"Thus, tak<strong>in</strong>g declared threatened flora would <strong>in</strong>clude not only direct <strong>in</strong>jury or destruction by human hand ormach<strong>in</strong>e but such activities as allow<strong>in</strong>g stock to graze on <strong>the</strong> flora, <strong>in</strong>troduc<strong>in</strong>g pathogens that attack it,alter<strong>in</strong>g water tables such that <strong>the</strong> flora is deprived <strong>of</strong> adequate soil moisture or is <strong>in</strong>undated, allow<strong>in</strong>g airpollutants to harm foliage etc.In <strong>the</strong> case <strong>of</strong> threatened plants which need fire for regeneration, burn<strong>in</strong>g at an appropriate time may notadversely affect <strong>the</strong> survival <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> population. However, burn<strong>in</strong>g would <strong>in</strong>jure exist<strong>in</strong>g plants andconstitutes "tak<strong>in</strong>g" under <strong>the</strong> Act. Therefore, M<strong>in</strong>isterial approval is required prior to conduct<strong>in</strong>g a burnwhich <strong>in</strong>volves any species <strong>of</strong> endangered flora.4. POLICYThe <strong>Department</strong> will,4.1 Identify, locate and seek to conserve threatened flora.4.2 Undertake research <strong>in</strong>to <strong>the</strong> taxonomy, population biology, ecology, protection and propagation <strong>of</strong>threatened flora.4.3 Implement management practices to conserve threatened flora and its habitat.4.4 Publicise <strong>the</strong> need for conservation <strong>of</strong> threatened flora, and encourage <strong>in</strong>volvement <strong>in</strong> conservation fromall sectors <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> community.4.5 Liaise with o<strong>the</strong>r land management and research agencies and private land owners to enhance <strong>the</strong> studyand conservation-<strong>of</strong>threatened flora.4.6 Develop and manage a geographic data base 1 . for threatened flora at its headquarters and at regionaland district <strong>of</strong>fices.


5. STRATEGIES4To accomplish <strong>the</strong> <strong>Department</strong> objective and policies, staff will:5.1 Establish a consultative committee with <strong>the</strong> Western Australian Herbarium, K<strong>in</strong>gs Park Board, tertiary<strong>in</strong>stitutions and o<strong>the</strong>r relevant organisations to ensure that research and management <strong>of</strong> declared threatenedflora are coord<strong>in</strong>ated.5.2 Develop <strong>Wild</strong>life Management Programs and Interim <strong>Wild</strong>life ManagementGuidel<strong>in</strong>es, for threatened plant taxa, and appo<strong>in</strong>t fixed term "recovery teams"for <strong>the</strong>ir implementation.5.3 Undertake tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> <strong>Department</strong>al obligations to conserve and manage threatened flora.5.4 Nom<strong>in</strong>ate threatened <strong>Flora</strong> Officers (additional to District <strong>Wild</strong>life Officers)<strong>in</strong> each region and district who shall be responsible for identify<strong>in</strong>g, locat<strong>in</strong>g,mapp<strong>in</strong>g, tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g staff, oversee<strong>in</strong>g management programs and provid<strong>in</strong>g liaison and advice onthreatened flora.5.5 Establish and ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong> field herbaria, photographic collections, map recordsand o<strong>the</strong>r aids concern<strong>in</strong>g threatened flora at each Ranger station and districtand regional <strong>of</strong>fice.5.6 Arrange an <strong>in</strong>spection to establish whe<strong>the</strong>r declared threatened flora arepresent before undertak<strong>in</strong>g any activity on CALM land that <strong>in</strong>volvespermanent destruction (i.e. clear<strong>in</strong>g for road-mak<strong>in</strong>g, build<strong>in</strong>g, m<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g or o<strong>the</strong>rpurposes) <strong>of</strong> native flora.5.7 Ensure that no known declared threatened flora is destroyed, damaged, oro<strong>the</strong>rwise <strong>in</strong>jured by <strong>Department</strong>al staff or <strong>the</strong>ir contractors without firstobta<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g a m<strong>in</strong>isterial permit so to do.5.8 Ensure that any burn<strong>in</strong>g program (for fire protection purposes) will not cause irreparable damage tospecies <strong>of</strong> threatened flora known to be susceptible to rim.5.9 Observe o<strong>the</strong>r operational guidelide's for protection <strong>of</strong> endangered flora onCALM lands as detailed <strong>in</strong> Adm<strong>in</strong>istrative Instruction No. 24 "Protection <strong>of</strong>Endangered [7hreatened] <strong>Flora</strong> <strong>in</strong> <strong>Department</strong>al Operations".5.10 Monitor known populations <strong>of</strong> threatened flora.5.11 Ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong> a geographic and biological data base on threatened flora.5.12 Develop management programmes for species <strong>of</strong> threatened flora.5.13 Collect seed and propagate threatened flora <strong>in</strong> <strong>Department</strong>al nurseries. Replant propagated material<strong>in</strong> <strong>the</strong> wild under an approved management programmes or approved Interim <strong>Wild</strong>life ManagementGuidel<strong>in</strong>es.5.14 Undertake research on <strong>the</strong> distribution, taxonomy, genetic systems, population biology, ecology,protection and propagation <strong>of</strong> threatened flora.


5.15 Assist private property owners and o<strong>the</strong>r land management agencies <strong>in</strong> <strong>the</strong> protection andconservation <strong>of</strong> threatened flora.5.16 Acquire land through donation, exchange or purchase to protect threatened flora where land and/orfunds are available.5.17 Ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong> a system for list<strong>in</strong>g and delist<strong>in</strong>g flora on <strong>the</strong> declared threatened schedule.55.18 Publicise <strong>in</strong>formation on threatened flora (without disclos<strong>in</strong>g precise locations) and encouragecommunity <strong>in</strong>volvement <strong>in</strong> <strong>the</strong> conservation <strong>of</strong> threatened flora.5.19 Ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong>, through <strong>the</strong> <strong>Wild</strong>life Branch, central records <strong>of</strong> all correspondence, discoveries <strong>of</strong>threatened flora populations, basic <strong>in</strong>formation on susceptibility to fire or dependence on fire forregeneration, applications for m<strong>in</strong>isterial permits and o<strong>the</strong>r matters to do with declared threatenedflora.5.20 Refer enforcement matters regard<strong>in</strong>g <strong>the</strong> tak<strong>in</strong>g <strong>of</strong> declared threatened flora to <strong>the</strong> appropriate District<strong>Wild</strong>life Officer.Syd SheaEXECUTIVE DIRECTOR10 December 1992Distribution: Lists A, B, D, E and L

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