Search
Close this search box.

Island Restoration Project

By

Island Restoration Project
Advertisement

Lady Elliot Island is a coral cay located at the southern tip of the World Heritage Listed Great Barrier Reef and they have recently embarked on a 7-year island restoration project.

Island Restoration Project

Situated within a highly protected ’Green Zone’, this beautiful 42-hectare coral cay is a sanctuary for over 1,200 species of marine life, including whales, manta rays, turtles, dolphins and coral. The Island also has the second-highest diversity of breeding seabirds of any island on the Great Barrier Reef.

Island Restoration Project

Historically Lady Elliot Island was a degraded landscape following guano mining in the 1800’s which removed all topsoil and vegetation, leaving only bare rock. Past and present custodians have worked tirelessly to restore the island back to its previous natural state.

Island Restoration Project

In 2018, Lady Elliot Island was selected as the first ‘climate change ark’ through the Great Barrier Reef Foundation’s Reef Islands Initiative. This initiative brings the Resort, local businesses, Government, community and Traditional Owners together to fast-track the Island’s restoration through on ground and in water actions.

Island Restoration Project

The major project under the Reef Islands Initiative, is a large-scale 7-year Revegetation Program (2018 – 2025) to remove highly invasive introduced plants such as Lantana, Dragon fruit and Mother of millions (there are 66 introduced plant species on the Island) and plant native coral cay species such as Pisonia trees, sandpaper figs and native grasslands. The aim is to restore the natural cay ecosystem and create a diversity of habitats for migratory nesting seabirds and sea turtles.

Island Restoration Project

So far the project has:

Cleared weeds and revegetated 5.6 hectares of the island with native coral cay species

Planted 3000 native trees, plants, ground cover and grasses

Established a 2000 square meter nursery with a capacity to stock 7500 plants

Native plants propagated from the island or adjoining coral cays

450 highly invasive umbrella trees removed

Photo Credit: Lady Elliot Island

Want more conservation-related articles?

500 Green Turtle Hatchlings Released 

Ceningan Divers release online Education Centre to promote environmental conservation

Florida Passes New Bill to Stop Further Sales of Shark Fins

World Oceans Day

 

Subscribe
Notify of
guest

0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

LET’S KEEP IN TOUCH!

Get a weekly roundup of all Scuba Diver news and articles
We don’t spam! Read our privacy policy for more info.
Picture of Adrian Stacey
Adrian Stacey
Scuba Diver ANZ Editor, Adrian Stacey, first learned to dive on the Great Barrier Reef over 24 years ago. Since then he has worked as a dive instructor and underwater photographer in various locations around the world including, Egypt, Costa Rica, Indonesia, Thailand, Mexico and Saba. He has now settled in Australia, back to where his love of diving first began.
Latest Stories
Advertisement
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x