Paraburdoo is a mining town which is located at the south western end of the Hamersley Range National Park in the Pilbara region.
Pannawonica is an iron-ore mining town located in the Pilbara region of Western Australia, near the Robe River.
Known best for its unique geological rock formations, Organ Pipes National Park is home to a wide variety of plants and animals across three distinct communities, found along the river, on the slopes and on the top of the escarpment. Over 150 years of grazing and farming had left the land barren and eroded before the park was protected in 1972. Since then revegetation efforts have enabled the return of many native species.
Situated on beautiful Phillip Island, Newhaven College provides education from Prep to Year 12. This unique 82 acre site is bursting with wildlife and a prime location for a Climate Watch Trail.
The grounds also include a Climate Watch Cultural Trail experience which celebrates Bunurong stories and nature. From bushfire recovery and resilience, to wisdom about the Moonah tree, powerful narrations from Bunurong Elders enable visitors to understand the importance of country in a new light.
Newhaven College has created an education program for younger year levels, demonstrating to others in the school how to monitor and observe species. The cultural trail provides an avenue for outdoor classrooms for both environmental and cultural studies.
They have also created an education program for younger year levels, demonstrating to others in the school how to monitor and observe species.
With native bushland right on campus, Murdoch University is an ideal location for recording ClimateWatch indicator species such as the endangered Carnaby's Black-Cockatoo, WA Christmas Tree and Cowslip Orchid.
Murdoch Environmental Restoration Group (MERG) and Earthwatch are excited to deliver this new ClimateWatch trail to Murdoch's Perth campus, a location that features important remnant Banksia Woodland habitat that were once prolific across the Swan Coastal Plain.
he Australian Botanic Garden at Mount Annan hosts remnants of native Cumberland Plain Woodland vegetation. The ClimateWatch trail has been created to engage the public in the long-term monitoring of biodiversity found in the Garden. Mount Annan is also host to the new PlantBank facility which houses the Royal Botanic Gardens Domain & Trust seeds and specialises in scientific research and conservation of native vegetation.
Our ClimateWatch in Parks initiative worked together with Friends of Morwell National Park to create this ClimateWatch trail, connecting the La Trobe community to their local flora and fauna. Start your walk from Foster's Gully Visitor's Area.
The environmental significance of the area makes it a haven for the community to enjoy and learn about the environment and conservation values of Morwell National Park.
Within the 15 ha Valley Reserve, near the corner of Waverley and Stephenson Roads, lies some of the only remaining patches of intact bushland in the area. These provide a vital habitat for a wide range of flora and fauna, and a fascinating insight into how Mount Waverley looked before urban development.