Join the Pigsfly Movement! Support bold, ad-free commentary with a membership today. Click below to keep the truth flying high!

Comic explainer: forest giants house thousands of animals (so why do we keep cutting them down?)

File 20181129 170241 np8k0s.png?ixlib=rb 1.1
Wes Mountain/The Conversation, CC BY-ND

Madeleine De Gabriele, The Conversation and Wes Mountain, The Conversation

Giant eucalypts play an irreplaceable part in many of Australia’s ecosystems. These towering elders develop hollows, which make them nature’s high-rises, housing everything from endangered squirrel-gliders to lace monitors. Over 300 species of vertebrates in Australia depend on hollows in large old trees.

These “skyscraper trees” can take more than 190 years to grow big enough to play this nesting and denning role, yet developers are cutting them down at an astounding speed. In other places, such as Victoria’s Central Highlands Mountain Ash forests, the history of logging and fire mean that less than 1.2% of the original old-growth forest remains (that supports the highest density of large old hollow trees). And it’s not much better in other parts of our country.

David Lindenmayer explains how these trees form, the role they play – and how very hard they are to replace.




Read more:
Mountain ash has a regal presence: the tallest flowering plant in the world


Wes Mountain/The Conversation, CC BY-ND



Read more:
The plan to protect wildlife displaced by the Hume Highway has failed



Sign up to Beating Around the Bush, a series that profiles native plants: part gardening column, part dispatches from country, entirely Australian.The Conversation

Madeleine De Gabriele, Deputy Editor: Energy + Environment, The Conversation and Wes Mountain, Multimedia Editor, The Conversation

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Powering Greed: How Politicians and Energy Giants Conspire to Bleed Australians...

0
Picture a giant machine labeled "Ergon Energy" with various gears and levers marked "Service Fees," "Untaxed Profits," and "Monopoly Power." The machine is churning...

A gas market run by a cartel is no market

0
A gas market run by a cartel is no market Despite what Canberra believes, the gas crisis is not a question of supply. The problem lies...

The gospel of Scott Morrison is his most poisonous legacy

0
Maeve McGregor asserts that even with the long march of time, Scott Morrison’s compulsion for lying and utter shamelessness remains both unmoved and spectacularly...

Hayne’s failure to tackle bank structure means that in a decade...

0
Hayne’s failure to tackle bank structure means that in a decade or so another treasurer will have to call another royal commission Andrew Linden, RMIT...

Banking Royal Commission’s damning report: ‘Things are so bad that new...

0
Banking Royal Commission's damning report: 'Things are so bad that new laws might not help' Peter Martin, The Conversation Royal Commissioner Kenneth Hayne has identified “greed”...

The ‘No’ campaign bid to ‘create confusion’

0
A moment of confusion disrupted the final day of the parliamentary inquiry into the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Voice referendum this week. Former...

Adani’s key water management plan is flawed and used some unverified...

0
Report finds more than 95% chance of hydrological changes to Belyando River Basin from mines including Carmichael The CSIRO has found serious flaws in Adani's...

Morrison government battles national integrity commission

0
View from The Hill: Day One of minority government sees battle over national integrity commission Michelle Grattan, University of Canberra Whatever it does, the Morrison government...

The Five Rules of Buying Political Influence

0
All this stuff about Sam Dastyari - but what about poor Huang Xiangmo? Bloke turns up here, observes how business has been traditionally done, pulls...

Adani may still get Taxpayers $Billions

0
Why Adani may still get its government loan Brendan Gogarty, University of Tasmania Even though the Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk announced she would be vetoing the...

Why businesses want the ear of government and are willing to...

0
Why businesses want the ear of government and are willing to pay for it George Rennie, University of Melbourne Political donations and lobbying are a significant...

🐑🥬 **Albo the Magnificent: Style Over Substance or Genuine Engagement?**

0
In the world of political theater, where every move is meticulously choreographed and every statement strategically crafted, 🎉📢🔥 one might be forgiven for mistaking...

Join the Pigsfly Movement! Support bold, ad-free commentary $10 per year. Click below to keep the truth flying high!