To date, 279 sites have been declared as Assets of Intergenerational Significance across 127 national parks, protecting the key habitat for:
- 77 threatened plant species, including the previously declared Wollemi pine
- 31 threatened animal species
- 6 locally extinct mammals which have been reintroduced to 4 of the feral predator-free fenced areas.
In New South Wales, the numbat (Myrmecobius fasciatus) is found only within feral predator-free areas.
An Asset of Intergenerational Significance can be any area of exceptional value – environmental or cultural – that warrants special protection, including dedicated management measures.
For each Asset of Intergenerational Significance, the National Parks and Wildlife Service has a statutory obligation to prepare and implement a concise conservation action plan which sets out:
- the environmental and cultural values of the land
- key risks to those values
- management activities to address and mitigate the risks – such as dedicated feral animal control or fire management
- actions to measure and report on the health and condition of the declared value.
Consultation on draft plans
There were 6 conservation action plans open for public comment. Comments closed on 12 September 2024.
View the draft conservation actions plans
We will consider all submissions and make any required amendments before the conservation action plans are approved and adopted.
Once the conservation action plans are adopted, they will be published on the Assets of Intergenerational Significance webpage.
Contact us
National Parks and Wildlife Service Conservation Planning
Phone: 1300 361 967
Email: [email protected]