A NSW Government website

Ramornie National Park Plan of Management

Ramornie National Park is located 40 kilometres west of Grafton on the NSW North Coast. It was reserved in 1999 and covers 3,307 hectares. The park is in 2 portions separated by Ramornie State Forest.
Publisher: Office of Environment and Heritage
Cost: Free
Language: English
ISBN: 978-1-74293-468-6 / ID: OEH20120051
File: PDF 1.3 MB / Pages 0
Name: ramornie-national-park-plan-of-management-120051.pdf
 
Tags: Plan of managementFinal

Ramornie National Park contains 328 native plant species, including 2 vulnerable species and 11 species of significance. There is a relatively high diversity of eucalypt species, with 16 species recorded. The gallery dry rainforest is considered part of an endangered ecological community.

The park is also particularly significant for the conservation of woodland birds, owls, gliders, bats and small mammals. There are 22 threatened fauna species currently recorded in the park, with a further 5 species predicted to occur.

The park also contains an Aboriginal site and a number of historic sites, including a tick quarantine fence, the stumps of a former tick inspector’s building and a stockman’s shelter.