Advanced
Search
 Home | About Us | Feedback | Help | Site Map
Native Plants & Animals
Department of Primary Industries, Parks, Water and Environment

Home > Native Plants & Animals > Publications, Links & Other Resources

Publications, Links & Other Resources

Useful Links
Notesheets
Forms


Publications & Useful Resources

NEW Guidelines for Natural Values Assessments (previously called the Consultants Brief)
NEW The Newsletter of the Orange-bellied Parrot Recovery Program - July 2009
NEW 2008/09 Swift Parrot Breeding Season Survey
2007/08 Swift Parrot Breeding Season Survey
Wildlife Monitoring Strategy
Strategy for Managing Wildlife Disease in the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area
Flowering Times of Tasmanian Orchids: A Practical Guide for Field Botanists
Reservation Status of Tasmanian Native Higher Plants
Manual for Assessing Vegetation Condition in Tasmania
Wildlife Health in Tasmania Manual
Report on the Hamish Saunders Memorial Island Survey Program 2006 - Three Hummock Island
Report on the Hamish Saunders Memorial Island Survey Program 2005 - Tasman Island
Know Your Ferals - brochure on introduced animals in Tasmania
Keeping Reptiles in Tasmania brochure
From Forest to Fjaeldmark - Descriptions of Tasmania's Vegetation
Little Book of Common Names for Tasmanian Plants
Conservation Assessment of Tasmania’s Beach Nesting and Migratory Shorebirds
Nature Conservation Report Series
Tasmanian Bushcare Toolkit
Tasmanian Wetlands Strategy
Tasmania's Nature Conservation Strategy
Threatened Fauna Handbook
Threatened Species Strategy
Threatened Species Day held 7 September each year - A booklet celebrating our native plants and animals
The Running Postman (Newsletter of the Private Land Conservation Program)




Notesheets

Pic of a number of PWS notesheets
Many of these Notesheets (pamphlets) were created in collaboration with the Parks and Wildlife ServiceYou are now leaving our site. DPIPWE is not responsible for the content of the web site to which you are going. The link does not constitute any form of endorsement. The Notesheets provide information on a wide range of subjects and are invaluable guides.

Topics covered include:
Plants
Wildlife
Living with Wildlife
Threatened Habitats
Threats
Caring for Nature
Fire Management
Geodiversity

Plants

General information on the unique plants and plant communities found in Tasmania...
People and Plants on our Land
Agastachys odorata
Anopterus glandulosus
Banksia marginata
Bellendena montana
Blechnum nudum
Blechnum wattsii
Buttongrass Moorland
Cenarrhenes nitida
Coastal Vegetation
Dicksonia antarctica
Endemic Plants
Eucalypt Forest
Fagus
Gahnia grandis
Gleichenia dicarpa
Gleichenia microphylla
Gymnoschoenus sphaerocephalus
Lomatia tinctoria
Microsorum pustulatum subsp. pustulatum
Nothofagus cunninghamii
Planting Oyster Bay Pine
Polystichum proliferum
Rumohra adiantiformis
Rural Tree Decline
Sticherus tener
Sticherus urceolatus
Swamp gum
Tasmanian Rainforest
Tasmannia lanceolata
Telopea truncata
Xanthorrhoea australis

Living with Wildlife

Guides for those living on the land on how to share your property with native wildlife...
Brushtail possums
Eagles
Hawks
Snakes
Tasmanian devil and quolls
Tasmanian native hen
Wallabies and kangaroos
Trapping of Wildlife

See the Gardens for Wildlife websiteYou are now leaving our site. DPIPWE is not responsible for the content of the web site to which you are going. The link does not constitute any form of endorsement.
Go to top of page

Wildlife

Information on the unique and special animals to be found in Tasmania...
Bats
Birds of Prey
Tasmania's Endemic Birds
Cape Barren Goose
Cave Creatures
Cave Ecology
Echidna
Fairy Penguins
Mammal Tracks
Mammals of Tasmania
Native rodents
Platypus
Quolls
Lizards of Tasmania
Seals of Tasmania
Short-tailed Shearwater
Small Macropods
Tasmanian Devil
Whales and whale strandings
White-bellied Sea Eagle
Wombat

Threatened Habitats

Information on those natural habitats that are in danger of being lost or irreversibly damaged, and how you can help stop the loss...
Wetlands

Threats

Information on the threats facing the wildlife and ecosystems of Tasmania, and what you can do to help in combating these threats...
Feral cats
Introduced Tree Frogs
Marram Grass
Boneseed - Controlling an Environmental Weed
Coastal Weeds
Phytophthera Root Rot
Go to top of page

Caring for Nature

Details of what you can do to look after the wildlife and habitats of Tasmania...
Caring for injured & orphaned wildlife
Wildlife Carers' Checklist
Keeping Wildlife Wild
Swift Parrot Habitat - A planting guide
Reducing Roadkill

Fire Management

Information on fire as a part of the ecology of Tasmanian ecosystems, and how it is managed...
Fire, Flora and Fauna

Geodiversity

General information on the rich geoheritage of Tasmania...
Formation of Tasmania
Tasmania's Cave Reserves
The Lake Highway
Geology of the Tasman Peninsula
Gondwana - The Great Supercontinent
Mole Creek Karst

Tasmanian Bushcare Toolkit

Tasmanian Bushcare Toolkit

The Toolkit provides landowners and community groups with a comprehensive guide to the management and conservation needs of native bush. The toolkit covers a wide variety of topics including different vegetation types, threatened species, revegetation and weed management.

Click on the image to download a copy of the toolkit.

Further Information

Contact: Biodiversity Conservation Branch
Biodiversity Conservation Branch
Department of Primary Industries, Parks, Water and Environment
134 Macquarie Street
HOBART TAS 7000
Phone: 03 6233 6556
Fax: 03 6233 3477
Email: Wildlife.Reception@dpipwe.tas.gov.au

Go to top of page


Tasmania Online


Tasmania Online | Service Tasmania

This page - http://www.dpipwe.tas.gov.au/inter.nsf/WebPages/SJON-5B23P7?open - was last published on 29 September 2009 by the Department of Primary Industries, Parks, Water and Environment. Questions concerning its content can be sent to NatureConservation Enquiries by using the feedback form, by mail to GPO Box 44, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia 7001, or by telephone to 03 6233 6556.

Please read our disclaimer and copyright statements governing the information we provide on this site.

A text version of this page is also available.