Just like water, birds know no boundaries. Their liberty is fluid, influenced by the seasonal availability of resources, or by tuning into the earth’s magnetic field to guide migration to familiar ...
Each year, millions of migratory waterbirds use invisible flight paths to traverse the skies. They are the masters of long distances, flying non-stop for days on end. They begin in their breeding ...
Australia’s wildlife is unique. It’s a testament to millions of years of isolation, diversification, and specialisation. Nowhere else in the world do Banjo Frogs “bonk” on a warm evening, in no other ...
From the road it’s easy to spot the creek line that forms Turnip Creek, which is located in the foothills of the Great Dividing Range between Euroa and Benalla in north-east Victoria. Tall eucalypts ...
My happy place is in nature, with people who respect our need to care for and actively manage country. I am drawn to deserts for their fragile beauty, their shifting sands, scurrying critters, endless ...
Bush Heritage Australia is a leading conservation not-for-profit protecting ecosystems and wildlife in landscapes across the continent.
While you’re in the area the Red Rocks Walking Trail is another great walk to do. It covers 6km and will take at least 2.5 hours (return). Take plenty of water. The track hugs the coastline and ...
Grass trees epitomise the Australian bush: they’re beautiful, ancient, hardy, thrive in nutrient-poor soils and respond to wildfire by flowering profusely. Grass trees are iconic plants, recognisable ...
Across our reserves and partnership properties we're protecting more than 9,000 native species – including hundreds of threatened species. We focus work in our priority landscapes – areas selected on ...
Why walk when you can hop? Australia's five species of hopping mice have long, narrow hind legs that allow them to hop quickly away from danger. Since European settlement, six species of hopping mouse ...
See the places we protect for more information on individual reserves and partnerships.
Tasmanian Devils are the largest carnivorous marsupials in the world and, for their size, have one of the most powerful bites of any mammal! Upset a Tasmanian Devil and you’ll quickly learn how it got ...