July 2025 Rates
Half yearly rate notices were issued on 22 July 2025, with a due date of 22 August 2025. View previous notices in MyCouncil.
Read more about July 2025 RatesHalf yearly rate notices were issued on 22 July 2025, with a due date of 22 August 2025. View previous notices in MyCouncil.
Read more about July 2025 RatesEcological restoration is an important process for habitat recovery worldwide.
Article and Images by Natural Areas Offset Officer, Sunshine Coast Council
Ecological restoration is an important process for habitat recovery worldwide. It provides vital structure and resources for a diversity of biota and ecological processes. Vegetation restoration is a first step in ecological restoration and habitat recovery. However, in the short term it often lacks some key biological resources that characterise an established and biodiverse natural ecosystem (Vesk et al., 2008; Munro et al., 2009).
The revegetation of degraded land has been undertaken now for several decades. Nest box installation has developed which addresses lost arboreal habitat. However what has been missing and not often considered is the replacement of on-ground habitat or terrestrial habitat.
Coarse woody debris (CWD) is generally absent from woody ecosystems where restoration actions have recently been initiated. This is because natural accumulation can be very slow, ranging from decades to centuries (Sturtevant et al., 1997; Vandekerkhove et al., 2009; Killey et al., 2010). By definition, larger pieces of CWD are rarer than smaller pieces because they take longer to form (Sturtevant et al., 1997; Dahlstrom et al., 2005).
For more information on constructed habitat stacks for fauna recovery within vegetation offset projects view here.
View the following videos to see how habitat stacks are made. Learn how this will help to address climate change and is fast tracking by more than 200 years the recovery of land back to healthy habitat with abundant native wildlife.
In 2014, Sunshine Coast Council commenced the delivery of broad-scale revegetation offset projects in response to the needs of various clients. These projects were typically undertaken on ex-livestock or sugar cane paddocks where full reconstruction of the reference ecosystem was required. The absence of coarse woody debris (CWD) on these sites quickly triggered an opportunity to salvage the large root balls and stem material from other council and external projects, and install them as 'habitat stacks' onto 2 offset sites.
Two infra-red motion detection cameras were deployed on 2 stacks, at different offset sites, approximately 12 months post installation 2015. The results were impressive with a range of mammals and reptiles being photographed.
Council’s natural areas offset officer trained a machinery operator to construct habitat stacks in a very specific way, so the stack will provide the most beneficial and long lasting habitat possible. A wildlife ecologist advised, in an open broad-scale paddock situation as many as one stack every 20 metres, in a random layout, could be installed to mimic the natural CWD load of a woody forest ecosystem. This validates the results of Manning et al., 2011 – the finding that 20 tonnes/ha clumped and 40 tonnes/ha clumped and dispersed, had similar effects for both small skinks and all reptiles. This has important implications for conservation managers as it indicates the minimum levels of added CWD required in the future. As CWD can be difficult to source, and expensive to move, our results show that the addition of 20 tonnes/ha clumped could be a more cost effective treatment than 40 tonnes/ha for a wide range of faunal species.
Council’s results have shown that installing CWD has immediate benefits for wildlife. This supports the suggestion, of others in the field of ecological restoration, that by installing CWD we could short cut the 100-200 year restoration timeframe that might otherwise be required, to achieve the same outcomes, and that reptiles, in particular, have been shown to respond rapidly to CWD augmentation (Manning et al., 2013).
The need to incorporate CWD into broad-scale offset and revegetation projects is now thought to be a critical element in ecosystem recovery. Council recognises that salvaged CWD holds immense value in accelerated habitat restoration and now seeks to salvage and store this unreplenishable resource for future use in offset revegetation sites.