FAME - Foundation for Australia's Most Endangered Species Inc. no time to waste
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Postal Address
PO Box 482,
Mitcham, SA 5062
South Australia
Australia

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(08) 8131 0066

 

Mt Lofty Ranges Southern Emu-Wren:
Save the Habitat and Save the Bird.

The Mount Lofty Ranges Southern Emu-Wren is losing its home:
The swamps of the Fleurieu Peninsula. The Southern Emu-Wren is nationally endangered. Less than 500 birds remain.

Fleurieu Peninsula swamps are critically endangered. Less than 75% of the original swamps are left, and they are under threat. If the swamps disappear so will the Emu-Wren, along with dozens if not hundreds of unique Australian animals and plants.


The Southern Mt. Lofty Ranges contain some of Australia's most unique plants and animals. Fleurieu Peninsula Swamps contain some of the rarest plants and animals found in South Australia. Like the Southern Emu-Wren, these plants and animals depend on the Swamps for their survival.

Fleurieu Peninsula swamps are home to 207 plant species. 167 of these are indigenous to the Mt. Lofty Ranges, 96 (57%) are of regional conservation significance and five are nationally threatened plant species like the Osborn's Eyebright and the Maroon Leek Orchid.

Many invertebrates use swamps and some - like the Black Ground Beetle (a type of Carabid beetle thought extinct until rediscovered in 1997) - are found only in Fleurieu Peninsula Swamps. 15 types of reptile, 10 amphibians, 7 mammal species and 43 bird species have been recorded within Fleurieu Peninsula Swamps. The Southern Emu-Wren is the most endangered of these.

The solution for the swamps and their inhabitants is to prevent further damage to the swamps that remain, restore degraded areas, and create corridors between isolated areas.

Support FAME's work with endangered species like the Mt Lofty Ranges Southern Emu-Wren.
Donate now, or join FAME, via our secure site.

 

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