Making national parks truly national.

[caption id="attachment_5412" align="alignleft" width="500"]Kakadu National Park - Flickr/Marc Dalmulder Kakadu National Park - Flickr/Marc Dalmulder[/caption]

Environment Insitute member Corey Bradshaw co-authored this piece on on June 14, 2013.

Australia boasts over covering 28 million hectares of land, or about 3.6% of Australia. You could be forgiven for thinking we鈥檙e doing well in the biodiversity-conservation game.


But did you know that of those more than 500 national parks, only six are ? For marine parks, it鈥檚 a little more: 61 of the 130-plus are managed primarily by the Commonwealth. This means that the majority of our important biodiversity refuges are managed exclusively by state and territory governments. In other words, our national parks aren鈥檛 鈥渘ational鈥 at all.


In a world of perfect governance, this wouldn鈥檛 matter. But we鈥檙e seeing designed to protect our 鈥渘ational鈥 and marine parks by many state governments. Would making all of them truly national do more to conserve biodiversity?


One silly decision resulting in a major ecosystem disturbance in a national park can take decades if not hundreds of years to heal. Ecosystems are complex interactions of millions of species that take a long time to evolve - they cannot be easily repaired once the damage is done.


The full article can be accessed.
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