DSE Home > Conservation and Environment > Biodiversity > Victoria's Biodiversity Strategy > Directions in Management

Directions - Management Approaches - In largely natural landscapes

In Victoria, natural landscapes with sufficient scale and quality to largely maintain their ecological integrity, have, for the most part, only been retained in areas remote from historical development. These large and less disturbed areas are predominantly in public ownership as our national parks and State forests. The sustainability of these areas is fundamentally due to their size and their intact and functional natural processes, which means they are relatively robust in response to most perturbations or fluctuations of environmental or human origin. Historical development patterns and public land-use decisions have meant that these areas are now Victoria’s major reservoirs of biodiversity, in contrast to the rural and urban landscapes where the depletion and fragmentation of natural areas has resulted in a concentration of the elements of biodiversity that are now considered threatened.
Photo: Tree

The key management approaches in the largely natural landscapes are:
  • to maintain largely natural ecological processes in a ‘comprehensive, adequate and representative reserve system’ through Park Management Plans, the Regional Forest Agreement processes, Forest Management Plans, and Fire Management Plans
  • to protect the integrity of these areas by controlling broadscale threatening processes
  • to maximise the conservation of biodiversity assets outside this reserve system, in the context of other uses that are ecologically sustainable.
Photo: Red-necked Avocet

The key objective in these landscapes is to continue implementing and improving the processes that are already in place to manage the environments in our State forests, parks and reserves. It is also important that we continue to improve our understanding of the natural operation of ecological processes in these landscapes so we can maintain their long-term health, productivity and catchment protection values.

An important function of management in the largely natural landscapes is to provide the ‘backbone’ of a ‘comprehensive, adequate and representative’ (CAR)system of terrestrial areas as part of a national reserve system. Comprehensiveness requires that the full range of natural communities and species is conserved; adequacy requires the maintenance of ecological viability and integrity of populations, species and communities; and representativeness should ensure that the full biotic diversity, including genetic diversity, is included. These requirements are articulated in the Scientific Guidelines for establishing the National Reserve System (1997), which include the nationally agreed biodiversity criteria for the CAR system developed for the National Forest Policy (JANIS 1996).

Summary of the biodiversity criteria for a CAR reserve system in the forest estate


Across the forest estate, in areas not included in the CAR Reserve System, the principles of Ecologically Sustainable Forest Management (ESFM) ensure that these areas contribute to biodiversity. The ESFM principles include protecting and maintaining biodiversity, ecological integrity where the health and vitality of the ecosystem are maintained, and invoking the precautionary principle.

Forest Management Plans are the principal tools for defining the on-ground conservation actions in these areas and they will be developed for all forest areas. Many bioregions are linked by catchment flows, and effective forest management assists in ensuring that the quality of water leaving the largely natural landscapes and entering other areas is maintained. In general, the freshwater and wetland environments in these landscapes, particularly where the headwaters are relatively intact, are in good condition. Codes of Practice (e.g. for timber harvesting, road making) and other guidelines (e.g. for minimising soil disturbance in alpine areas) are applied to management activities to keep these environments in their present or better condition.

Given that these areas support substantial components of our biodiversity, special attention needs to be given to the strategic management of some of the more invasive threats such as environmental weeds and introduced predators.

Conserving biodiversity also requires complementary management of areas outside conservation reserves, State forest and the predominantly natural landscape. This involves a variety of mechanisms (see next chapter) under the theme of maximising biodiversity across the entire landscape.

This involves a variety of mechanisms (see next chapter) under the theme of maximising biodiversity across the entire landscape.

Key Directions Page top

Return to 'Directions in Management' content page.


printer friendly version