Scientists hope an endangered listing may help preserve alpine ash forests, but the forestry industry is raising concerns that it could result in further decline.
Posts by Tom Fairman
It was great to speak with Annie Brown from ABC Rural about the listing of Alpine Ash. We had a great chat, but one thing this article didn't get to mention is the importance of seed collection as one of the many strategies to steward the forest type. www.abc.net.au/news/rural/2...
Scientists predict fire-sensitive Alpine Ash forests could be halved in the next 60 years as too-frequent fires prevent forest regeneration.
Read: theconversation.com/australias-a...
Via @theconversation.com by @itsnotfairman.bsky.social & @trentpenman.bsky.social
The Alpine Ash ecosystem of mainland Australia has been listed as endangered. This is pretty serious for such a widespread forest type. In this article we go into the reasons for the listing, and how active approaches to management can help with stewardship.
theconversation.com/australias-a...
It's not my domain but there is fertile ground here for a study into whether the way the Vic Govt ended native forestry has been a "just transition".
The Vic Auditor General has completed an assessment of the transition out of native forestry, & it feels like the message has been "data deficient". But what is known is that it appears that there has been an overall decline in job security for affected workers.
www.audit.vic.gov.au/report/suppo...
This article feels pretty close to a type of truth-telling about how fire management in south-eastern Australia has been discussed and debated the last few years. For fire scientists and ecologists alike, there is much to pause, digest and reflect on here. onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10....
Humbled to bea part of this paper on principles for developing evidence briefs for landscape fire management. besjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/...
On this day that supports inclusive futures for women and girls in science, let's not forget all the women that were sidelined, ignored, or forced out of science because they:
- had children
- prioritised family/caring
- did science differently
- questioned boundaries & norms
- fought the patriarchy
'Minding the forest gaps: uptake and use of single rope bridges over forest roads by arboreal fauna'
Interesting to see this work on the use of rope bridges as a tool in production forests (rather than across large and major roads).
www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1...
Was glad to speak with The Guardian about the impacts of frequent fires on ecosystems, and bang my usual drum about the need for a state level strategy on how we manage the inevitable change that is going to occur to many forest ecosystems. www.theguardian.com/environment/...
“The debate doesn’t need to be ‘do we burn or not burn’. That is an old, simplistic debate. What we need to understand is how much we burn, where we burn and for what reason.”
www.theage.com.au/politics/vic...
"The concept of lighting a fire to maintain the health of a forest didn't enter into the legislation."
www.abc.net.au/news/2026-01...
How many hollow bearing trees are in the forests of the Central Highlands of Victoria? Turns out about 1.5 million, with no difference between state forests and parks. This new paper is an amazing whole of landscape inventory of this crucial habitat resource. www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...
Looks like you were right, @ianpennaoz.bsky.social!
Buried in yesterday's major announcements is that the State's land use assessment council, VEAC, is being wound up. The end of a long journey that began with the outstanding Land Conservation Council. www.weeklytimesnow.com.au/news/victori...
great editorial on risk aversion in forest management particularly on proactive fire management vs reactive fire suppression. Equally relevant to southern Australia. esajournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10....
Back in 2020 it was estimated by the Parliament Budget Office that an immediate shutdown of the same industry would cost $15 million in the first three years before savings would appear over a decade. Seems to have been an underestimate. www.theguardian.com/environment/...
Interesting to see this report reporting that closing the native timber industry in Victoria has cost $1.5 billion (so far). It's good to contrast this to earlier estimates (and it's a gold thing I have a long memory!)
www.weeklytimesnow.com.au/news/victori...
Nice to see this expert elicitation on strategic fuel breaks being published. www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10....
How I feel about people thinking they are geniuses for putting the word "Great" in front of a generic descriptor of what's in that National Park
Finally someone is looking into the obsession with the word "Great" when it comes to natural assets. Same story for national parks - does my head in that we have a Great Otway, Great Koala, and Great Forest National Park (well that last one doesn't actually exist) www.theguardian.com/travel/2025/...
Kirsha Kaechele spoke at the Forestry Australia conference last year and it was a real treat. She brings an insightful outsiders perspective to the otherwise mind numbing forest war debates. www.themercury.com.au/news/opinion...
Ah the grapevine, I'm not a subscriber. Tbh I've seen a lot of wild things said that appear to arise from it, but I may be proven wrong!
My point being, it feels like veacs/LCC role for many decades has been about allocating lands respectively between logging and parks. It's served other purposes but that was a major feature of Grampians, alpine, east Gippsland, box Ironbark, Otways, river red gum assessment etc.
Do you have a copy of the Silver report? I'd love to see it. I may be wrong but i didnt think VEAC influenced funding for PV? Beyond that - don't know what will happen. Though, with the end of logging, a lot of the rationale and distinction of national parks and state forests changes, in my opinion.
A review in 2021 showed that more tree fern tags from from the Otways in Vic than all of Tasmania. And Victoria collects no fee for tag which means there is no monitoring. Always baffled me where all these ferns come from - plantations as they are harvested? Private land? It's just so much.
Good to see coverage of tree fern sales. I tend to agree with Prof Baker in this - Tasmania's tree fern sale system seems pretty good, particularly in how it raises fees for tags which then goes to fund monitoring and research. Victoria is another story, though. www.abc.net.au/news/2025-09...