Conjola National Park Plan of Management

Conjola National Park covers 11,060 hectares and lies on the mid-south coast of New South Wales, between Sussex Inlet and Lake Conjola.

Date
1 April 2009
Publisher
Department of Environment and Climate Change NSW
Type
Publication, Plan of management, Final
Status
Final
Cost
Free
Language
English
Tags
  • ISBN 978-1-74232-255-1
  • ID DECC20090329
  • File PDF 308KB
  • Pages 50
  • Name conjola-national-park-plan-of-management-090329.pdf

Conjola National Park protects 18 different vegetation communities, including four endangered ecological communities: Coastal Saltmarsh, Swamp Sclerophyll Forest, Swamp Oak Floodplain Forest and Bangalay Sand Forest. It also contains five threatened plant species and 25 species of threatened fauna.

Conjola National Park also contains a large number of Aboriginal sites, including middens, campsites, rock shelters and grinding grooves, and a number of historic features.

Photo: Conjola National Park / Michael Van Ewijk/OEH