Oyster Harbour Catchment Group
  • HOME
  • ABOUT
    • Our Groups Story >
      • Meet our Committee of Volunteers
      • Meet Our Staff
      • Our Fellow Community Groups
    • Catchment History
    • Natural Resources
    • Threats >
      • Erosion
      • Cats: Feral, Stray and Domestic
      • Feral Rodents
      • Invasive Plants
    • Natural Wonders >
      • Biodiversity >
        • Seagrass meadows
        • Spiders
        • Western Ringtail Possum
  • PROJECTS
    • Regional Landcare Program
    • Looking Forward, Looking Back: farm planning
    • "uPtake" fertiliser trial
    • Healthy Estuaries WA >
      • Nutrient Mapping
    • Taking Past Learnings into the Future
    • Ranges Link
    • Past Projects
  • GET INVOLVED
    • Membership
    • Donate
    • Have Your Say
    • Newsletter
    • Citizen Science and other volunteering opportunities
    • Albany and Surrounds Feral Cat Working Group >
      • Albany and Surrounds Cat Blog
    • 2022 Oyster Harbour Estuary Forum
  • CONTACT US
  • RESOURCES
    • For Youth and the Youthful at Heart
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Ranges-link Project

Landholder-led nature conservation and ecological restoration comes from the farming country between the Porongurup and Stirling Ranges. Farmers and conservationist (Friends of the Porongurup Range) working together to improve ecosystem processes and provide wildlife corridors for our native plants and animals.  
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Ranges Link Conservation Action Plan
File Size: 1777 kb
File Type: pdf
Download File

Ranges Link Veg Survey
File Size: 9110 kb
File Type: pdf
Download File

Ranges Link - Bringing Country Back to Life from Gondwana Link on Vimeo.

Crown of the Ranges-link:
​Twin Creeks Conservation Reserve

This is a protected bush properties owned by Friends of the Porongurup Range conservation non-profit group. Located in and part of the Oyster Harbour Catchment Group/ Ranges Link Project.    

The Reserve is a mixture of remnant bush, revegetation and regrowth.

Varied soil types across the Reserve result in a diversity of plant communities from the Sheoak groves on granite outcrops to the flooded ironstone heath and to the lateritic Jarrah/Marri uplands.

We acknowledge the Minang and Koreng people as the traditional custodians of the land on which we work and live. We pay our respects to the Elders, past, present, and emerging and to the wider Noongar community. ​

​Sponsors and Supporters
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  • HOME
  • ABOUT
    • Our Groups Story >
      • Meet our Committee of Volunteers
      • Meet Our Staff
      • Our Fellow Community Groups
    • Catchment History
    • Natural Resources
    • Threats >
      • Erosion
      • Cats: Feral, Stray and Domestic
      • Feral Rodents
      • Invasive Plants
    • Natural Wonders >
      • Biodiversity >
        • Seagrass meadows
        • Spiders
        • Western Ringtail Possum
  • PROJECTS
    • Regional Landcare Program
    • Looking Forward, Looking Back: farm planning
    • "uPtake" fertiliser trial
    • Healthy Estuaries WA >
      • Nutrient Mapping
    • Taking Past Learnings into the Future
    • Ranges Link
    • Past Projects
  • GET INVOLVED
    • Membership
    • Donate
    • Have Your Say
    • Newsletter
    • Citizen Science and other volunteering opportunities
    • Albany and Surrounds Feral Cat Working Group >
      • Albany and Surrounds Cat Blog
    • 2022 Oyster Harbour Estuary Forum
  • CONTACT US
  • RESOURCES
    • For Youth and the Youthful at Heart