ENVIRONMENTAL EDUCATION
Falls Creek and the surrounding National Park are home to unique environments that support fauna and flora found nowhere else in the world. This page is dedicated to highlighting some of the wonders of our backyard.
AUSTRALIAN ALPS
The Australian Alps are different to the alpine mountains in most places overseas as our Alps have soil. Mountains overseas are generally younger, steeper, and rockier as they have been heavily glaciated. Glacial movement causes removal of sediment that forms soil by ice, water, wind and snow carrying it away. The absence of soil means less species can survive there. In Australia glacial movement has affected only a small area at the highest elevations in New South Wales.
Soil provides nutrients for plants and acts as an anchor for them to grow in, as well as creating a habitat for micro-organisms and invertebrates. These plants and animals then become the food source for other fauna, leading to a biodiverse ecosystem with mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians and aquatic animals.
Plants help reduce soil erosion by providing ground cover. The stability of Australian alpine ecosystems depends on good vegetation cover to maintain the health of the soils.
As Australian alpine environments make up less than 0.1% of the continent, we are able to see rare flora and fauna at Falls Creek and in the surrounding National Park found nowhere else. The wildlife up here is incredibly special and it’s up to us to protect and support the unique landscape we are a part of!
FAUNA
Falls Creek is home to a variety of different types of fauna, including mammals, invertebrates, fish, reptiles, birds and amphibians. These species are specially adapted to live in snowy, cold climates, or have strategies to migrate during the coldest months.
There are many threatened species found at Falls Creek, including the Alpine She-oak Skink, Alpine Water Skink, Guthega Skink, Alpine tree Frog, Broad-tooth Rat, Alpine Stonefly and Mountain Pygmy Possum. As of 2024, the Flora and Fauna Guarantee Act 1988 (Vic) lists 8 threatened mammals, 7 birds, 6 reptiles, 4 amphibians, 1 fish, 1 crustacean and 7 insects.
Some of the ways these species survive include hibernating or going into torpor during winter. Their metabolism slows down and their temperature drops until only the essential functions are still going. That means very little energy is needed to survive, so little food is required until hibernation or torpor is over when it is warmer. Mountain Pygmy Possums are a species that hibernates during the coldest part of the season. They store nuts and seeds with them in their nests 2-4m under the snow to nibble on when they occasionally wake up.
Another strategy is living entirely under the snow during winter. As the snow falls, rocks and vegetation get buried. Gaps form underneath that small mammals use to move around in and search for food. This area is called the sub-nivean zone. Under the snow temperatures remain constant around -2 to +2 degrees Celsius, while they vary a lot out in the open. Broad Toothed Rats, Antechinus and Bush Rats all survive in this way.
Nesting together is a strategy both reptiles and mammals use to share warmth. Lizards have been found in the centre of Snow Gum logs hibernating in hundreds.
Migration is common for most bird and flying insect species. Over half of bird species migrate to warmer places by moving to lower altitude areas or flying north to warmer latitudes. All of them return to the high country for the abundant feasts that appear in summer when the vegetation is fruiting, flowers are out, and Bogong Moths are around. Some examples of birds that migrate include the Flame Robin, Pink Robin and Currawong.
Challenges facing the alpine environment at Falls Creek such as increased temperatures with climate change, pest plants and animals, fire, increased infrastructure and pollution are all influencing the threatened state of the wildlife. These challenges lead to habitat loss, lack of viable food, decreased ability to breed and have successful offspring, and being preyed upon by introduced predators.
At FCAR we are working to help reduce these stressors on the fauna. We are liaising with researchers and other organisations to do what we can to conserve these species that are unique to this area.
Learn more about alpine fauna here: The Australian Alps Education Kit - Fauna and the Australian Alps factsheet (theaustralianalpsnationalparks.org)
Scientific name: Agrotis infusa
Bogong Moths are a keystone species for the health of alpine ecosystems in Australia. They are a crucial food source for critically endangered Mountain Pygmy Possums and many other high elevation species.
First Nations peoples have long harvested migrating Bogong Moths as a plentiful and nutritious food source, with different groups converging on the high plains to do business and conduct cross-cultural ceremonies during the migration period.
Bogong moths fly annually in spring from the warm inland plains of eastern Australia to aestivate (go dormant during warmer periods) in the cooler alpine areas along the Great Dividing Range. The moths then return to these inland areas in autumn to breed when food resources are suitable for their larvae.
Mass migrations usually occur at night with moths using the earth’s magnetic fields and the light of the night sky to orientate themselves towards the alpine areas of the Australian Capital Territory, the Victorian Alps and the Snowy Mountains in New South Wales. Every year it is each Moth’s first time making the huge journey, it’s incredible that such a small creature has this inbuilt knowledge and ability to navigate so far!
Bogong Moth numbers have suffered a catastrophic decline by about 99.5% between 2018 and 2021. In 2021, the Bogong Moth was added as endangered to the IUCN’s red list of threatened species. The sudden crash in the population is thought to be because of the severe droughts and fires exacerbated by climate change, as well as the use of pesticides, predation by introduced species, habitat loss and light pollution diverting migrating moths from their paths. Drought conditions in this time were so severe that many Bogong Moth larvae didn’t survive into adulthood.
The loss of any species is upsetting, but the rapid decline of Bogong Moths impacts many species. As Bogong Moths are near the bottom of the food chain, they feed much of the alpine ecosystem. They are also nectar eaters and act as pollinators, and their huge reduction in numbers could have a drastic effect on plants along their migration route.
You can help Bogong Moths and all the species that rely on them by not using insecticides, turning off unnecessary lights at night, reducing your carbon emissions and planting native flowers such as correa, eucalypts, tea tree and grevillea that support Bogong Moths.
FCAR monitors Bogong Moth numbers throughout the year to determine trends in their numbers.
You can report Bogong Moth sightings to help scientists know where moths are located and where they’ve gone off track here: Moth Tracker (swifft.net.au)
Scientific name: Galaxias olidus
Look into pools or streams of the Australian Alps and you may glimpse tiny Mountain Galaxias. Using their climbing abilities these fish clamber onto rocks in the splash zone. Here, using heat from the surrounding rocks, they regulate their body temperature which helps them to cope with the icy water around them.
This climbing ability also helps the species to move upstream where possible, beyond the reach of introduced fish such as trout. Trout are not only predators of the Galaxias but also directly compete for food sources such as insects, worms, and bugs. In Victoria and New South Wales, trout have fragmented Mountain Galaxias into isolated populations as they have confined them to the upper reaches of waterways.
Restoring and protecting the alpine moss-beds provides an important refuge for these hardy survivors.
Scientific name: Mastacomys fuscus
This hungry little native mammal has a wide, rounded head and fluffy coat, inhabiting alpine and subalpine heathlands, grasslands, and wetlands. In summer it nests in burrows in the soil and forms extensive runways through the thick vegetation. During winter it dens communally during the day in nests of shredded grass and creates tunnels under the snow in its quest for food. Can you imagine eating over half your body weight in food each day? The Broad-Tooth Rat has a large appetite and eats over half its bodyweight in grasses, sedges and seeds each day.
Unfortunately, sightings of Broad- Tooth Rats are becoming rare due to predation by feral cats and foxes and loss of suitable habitat. Managing predators and protecting and restoring their habitat is important for their survival.
Scientific name: Eulamprus kosciuskoi
Found only in wet alpine moss-beds and heaths, the Alpine Water Skink is critically endangered in Victoria. This skink scares easily and is thought to use the burrows created by crayfish to quickly get out of harm’s way or hide under moss at the wetlands edge. Unlike their lowland reptile cousins, alpine lizards and snakes rarely lay eggs as the conditions are too cold. Instead, they give birth to live young in the warmer months.
The Alpine Water Skink grows to a length of about 20cms and has distinctive dark stripes along its olive brown body. This distinguishes it from the Southern Water Skink, also found in the area, which has a spotty appearance.
Scientific name: Burramys parvus
The Mountain Pygmy Possum is the only Australian mammal adapted to live exclusively in the cold alpine and subalpine zone. They’re covered in thick greyish fur, have a long tail, agile front feet designed for gathering food and enlarged front teeth for cracking seeds.
Over the warmer months they work on almost doubling their body weight by feasting on berries, seeds, insects and fat rich Bogong Moths so that they can make it through the winter. Some of the food they collect is stored for their prolonged winter hibernation under the snow, of up to 7 months.
Mountain Pygmy Possums live primarily among rocky boulder fields and dense vegetation. The coverage from boulders and vegetation allows for gaps to form under the snow (called the sub-nivean zone) that remain between about -2 and +2 degrees Celsius. The stable temperatures under the snow compared to the varied temperatures in the open air are important for Mountain Pygmy Possum survival.
The total adult population is around 2000 individuals and there are a range of threats to this species’ survival.
Like many alpine species, climate change presents a risk for the Mountain Pygmy Possum. A reduction in snow depth because of warming temperatures reduces insulation and makes them more vulnerable to cold exposure. If Mountain Pygmy Possums come out of hibernation early, they risk not having enough food sources that are ready to consume.
Other threats to Mountain Pygmy Possums include the decrease of Bogong Moths (a staple food source), habitat loss, genetic loss through small, isolated populations, bushfires and pest animal species. Roads and infrastructure have reduced and broken up Mountain Pygmy Possum habitat. Noise created by snowmaking and slope grooming overhead may wake Mountain Pygmy Possums unexpectedly over winter.
Significant efforts are being undertaken across Victoria, and within Falls Creek to contribute to stabilising or increasing populations. At Mount Higginbotham and Mount Little Higginbotham, where the Great Alpine Road fragmented the Mountain Pygmy Possum population, a tunnel was created to allow Mountain Pygmy Possums to be able to reconnect their populations. This has been a success in allowing breeding and genetic diversity to increase again.
Falls Creek Alpine Resort and researcher Dean Heinze are members of the Victorian Mountain Pygmy Possum Recovery Team that collaborates and shares knowledge with other partners who are also involved in working to protect the Mountain Pygmy Possum. Works undertaken in recent years as part of the recovery project have included revegetation in burnt Mountain Pygmy Possum habitat using food source plants such as Mountain Plum Pine (Podocarpus lawrencei), and those that provide cover from predators, along with control of feral cats and foxes. FCAR has an annual monitoring program to detect any variation in the relative abundance of the arrival of migrating Bogong moths, which is an important food source for breeding possums.
The Mountain Pygmy Possum Recovery Project is supported by project partners North East CMA, Parks Victoria, Mount Hotham Alpine Resort, Falls Creek Alpine Resort, Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action, Traditional Owners and Zoos Victoria, through funding from the Australian Government’s National Landcare Program.
Scientific name: Canis dingo
Alpine Dingoes play an important ecological role in the alpine landscape, having been part of it for thousands of years. Dingoes are apex predators; they suppress populations of large herbivores and introduced mesopredators such as foxes and cats. Depending on the size of the prey, they hunt alone or in cooperative packs. They mainly hunt at dawn, dusk and in the night. They can run up to 60km/h, travel about 40km in a day and can even successfully climb some trees!
Alpine Dingoes have evolved differently to their relatives, they can live at higher elevations in the colder climate as they grow a second, thicker coat during late autumn to keep them warm over the winter. They are more flexible than dogs and can rotate their wrists and subluxate their hips. They also have much larger canine teeth. The widest part of a Dingo is their skull, so they can easily follow their head through any obstacle without getting stuck. These adaptions aid hunting and moving through burrows.
Dingoes have an annual breeding cycle, with females giving birth to 4-6 pups. Both males and females raise their young. Because Dingoes have a strict social hierarchy lead by an alpha pair, the dominant female of a pack usually kills any offspring of other females. The alpha pair usually mates for life. All members of the pack aid in the survival and raising of the dominant offspring. When pups begin to mature, they leave their family to find territory and start a pack of their own. Dingoes live for about 10 years in the wild.
In Victoria, the Dingo is listed as a threatened species under the Flora and Fauna Guarantee Act 1988. There are misconceptions about the Dingo, with people mistaking them as ‘wild dogs’ and treating them as pests. People have traditionally baited, shot, and trapped Dingoes to protect their land and livestock. This has been detrimental to Dingo populations, alongside habitat loss. There are now other non-lethal deterrents being trialed, such as chemical and acoustic, or having guardian animals for livestock. Unfortunately for Dingoes there has been slow updates to public policy and changing public opinion.
Previous DNA studies suggested that Dingo genetics were going extinct, as Dingoes were breeding with wild dogs and giving birth to hybrids. However more advanced testing showed that almost all the ‘wild dogs’ (nearly 90%) in Victoria were pure Dingoes, despite not always looking like a typical Dingo. The old DNA testing technique only used 23 DNA markers, while testing today uses 195,000 DNA markers and is much more accurate.
Dingoes within Alpine Resorts and the Alpine National Park are protected, and it is important that together we help keep our wild animals safe by ensuring that they do not become habituated to humans. Usually, dingoes are not interested in people.
You can help keep our Alpine Dingoes safe by making sure you:
- Never feed a Dingo.
- Never leaving food or litter in the bush or along roadsides.
- Keep your distance. If you see a Dingo and they see you, stay alert and calm.
- If you feel threatened keep calm and do not run, confidently call for help. Immediately advise FCAR or Parks Victoria if you become aware of any dingo that is behaving in a threatening way.
Read more about Dingoes here: New DNA testing shatters ‘wild dog’ myth: most dingoes are pure (theconversation.com)
Scientific name: Potorous longipes
Long-footed Potoroos are rabbit sized kangaroos with long noses and almost hairless tails. These small marsupials get their energy through consuming the fruiting bodies of underground fungi, small invertebrates and fruit. Fungi are super important for Long-footed Potoroos as they make up about 90% of their diet. This means that high soil moisture content through the year is an essential feature of their habitat. They inhabit montane wet sclerophyll forests over 1000m altitude to lowland forests at 150m with dense understorey vegetation that they use to shelter in during the day. They are nocturnal and forage for food during the night, creating pits in the ground in their search for fungi.
Long-footed potoroos can be distinguished from their relative Long-nosed Potoroos by their longer tail of more than 30cm long, hind feet longer than their head and a leathery pad on the sole of their feet.
Breeding occurs year-round with singular young born 2-3 times a year, usually in winter, spring and early summer.
Long-footed Potoroos are extremely rare with very limited distribution. There are two core populations in Victoria and a smaller population in south-eastern NSW. They are nationally recognised as endangered.
Scientific name: Dasyurus maculatus
Spotted-tail quolls are the largest native carnivore left on the mainland aside from dingoes, and one of the closest surviving relatives to the Tasmanian Tiger. They have a pointed snout, sharp canines and white spots along their body and tail. Their home is in forests, woodlands and heathlands of eastern Australia, favouring rocky escarpments and boulder piles.
These nocturnal marsupials create dens in tree hollows, rock crevices, underground burrows and fallen logs that they shelter in during the day. They are generalists and hunt on the ground and in trees for a variety of food, including birds, reptiles, frogs, eggs and medium sized mammals such as possums and rabbits. They hunt solo and attack prey by biting the back of the skull or neck. If prey is too large to eat in one sitting, Spotted Tailed Quolls will revisit the carcass until it is all gone. Because they are opportunists and eat dead animals, they are susceptible to being hit by cars.
Both males and females breed with multiple partners each autumn and winter, with females having a single litter of up to 6 young between May and August. Young are carried in a rudimentary pouch until they become too large, where they are left in the den while the mother forages. As they only live for less than 3-4 years, and rarely breed after age 3, the threat of populations dying out if there are consecutive low success breeding years is high.
Scientific name: Liopholis guthega
This very rare skink is the highest recorded skink in Australia, only existing on the Bogong High Plains and in Kosciusko National Park between 1600 and 2170m in altitude. With their greyish-brown colour and pale spots, they can blend in with their rocky surroundings. They rely on alpine tussock grasslands, heathlands, and snow gum woodlands for their habitat, creating burrow systems to live in with their family groups. These little reptiles can live for more than 10 years. Females give birth to one to four live young in the summer. They can often be seen basking on rocks taking in the warmth on sunny days. Over winter for about 5 months, Guthega Skinks go into hibernation under the snow.
Their main diet is invertebrates such as insects, worms, spiders and snails. Guthega Skinks help keep the populations of grasshoppers, crickets and beetles from causing damaging effects on the alpine vegetation during seasonal increases.
Climate change threatens the Guthega Skink, as with temperature increases sensitive alpine habitat becomes degraded. Habitat disturbance from development, and habitat degradation caused by introduced species such as deer, feral horses and various weeds are major threats. Vegetation changes from more frequent and intense bushfires is another form of habitat loss, leaving skinks vulnerable to predators. Currently the Guthega Skink is nationally recognised as endangered.
PEATLANDS, BOGS AND FENS
The Australian Alps are home to the headwaters of several major Victorian and New South Wales rivers. They provide over 29% of the total Murry Darling Basin’s average annual flows, despite representing 1% of the system’s catchment area. This is due to the higher precipitation rate in comparison to the rest of the catchment, with some of the contribution being snow that is released during the spring thaw.
Alpine bogs and fens play an important role in storing water, gradually releasing it, and reducing the potential for erosion. They provide a steady supply of clean water into streams during summer. A specially adapted bog species called sphagnum moss can store up to 20 times its own weight in water. The peat (partially decayed vegetation) found below alpine bogs is high in organic material and can hold between 100 and 300 litres of water per cubic meter. The importance of alpine bogs and associated fens for water supply is one of the reasons they are nationally protected under the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999.
There are numerous peatlands at Falls Creek! Peatlands are terrestrial wetland ecosystems where waterlogged conditions prevent plant material from fully decomposing. This means that much of the carbon from the dead plants remains in the soil instead of being released into the atmosphere, slowing climate warming. Peatlands only cover about 3% of the Earth’s surface but store more carbon than all other vegetation types in the world combined.
There are two types of peatlands- bogs, which receive water from precipitation, and fens, that receive water from groundwater. Vegetation is mostly made up of sphagnum mosses, herbs, sedges and shrubs that filter and regulate water flow.
Additional to being an important carbon sink, peatlands store pollen and charcoal that give us information about past climates, landscapes and fires. As soil layers can be dated, pollens and plant remnants detected at different zones in the peat tell us what flora was present at that point in time.
Alpine peatlands are listed as “endangered” under the Commonwealth Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 (EPBC), and “threatened” under Victoria’s Flora and Fauna Guarantee Act 1988 (FFG). They provide habitat for many threatened species like the Alpine Water Skink, Alpine Bog Skink and Broad Toothed Rat.
Bogs and fens face several threats, including development and infrastructure, invasive species, climate change, and bushfires. The addition of roads and tracks can mean that after rain events storm water rushes over hard surfaces and into the peatlands. This concentration of water often causes erosion of soil and alpine plants. Infrastructure can reduce the constant water supply bogs and fens need to stay healthy by diverting water flow, leading them to dry out.
Many of the alpine bogs and fens on the Bogong High Plains were burnt during the 2003 and 2006 fires, and following this were subject to the widespread establishment of weeds including willows. As the fires followed each other in quick succession, fire sensitive plants were destroyed, and communities couldn’t adequately recover.
In the village, while some bogs and fens are degraded, they are still important carbon stores and habitat for many native species. Degraded bogs and fens do not provide the same water regulating functions or storing ability as healthy peatlands, so restoring them is important for them to work at their full capacity.
Restoration work across the resort includes creating weirs with natural material to slow water flow as it enters bogs, revegetation planting and removal of invasive species.
You can learn more about peatlands here (video included): Falls Creek - Environmental - Alpine peatlands resource kit v1.pdf - All Documents (sharepoint.com)
And here (video included): Cross regional Alpine Peatlands protection project (necma.vic.gov.au)
GEOLOGY
The Australian Alps are made up of a wide range of rock types as the mountains have a complex geological history spanning around 520 million years.
Collisions of several small tectonic plates from 440-360 million years ago lead to mountains building, folding sedimentary and volcanic rocks and thickening the crust. Some rocks were buried deep and heated until they metamorphosed (changed structure), producing rocks such as schist and gneiss, which are seen around Mount Bogong and Falls Creek today.
After the period of folding, Australia entered a 200 million year geological quiet period, where mountain ranges slowly wore down. Post this geologically quiet time, Earth entered a global ice age and ice covered much of southern Australia.
In the last 50 million years basalt lava has erupted from small volcanoes over much of the alpine region, resulting in parts of the Victorian high plains being covered by basaltic rock. Because basalt is more resistant to denudation and erosion than the surrounding rocks, stepped topography can be seen in several areas.
Ruined Castle is a place you can see the exposed basaltic rock formations taking the shape of closely fitting hexagonal columns! The shape of the rock is due to the lava cooling process, where the interior lava cooled slower than the surface, causing cracks to form in the most efficient way. We are lucky to be able to see these fun shaped rock formations in our own backyard.
FIRE
Fire has been a part of the landscape for tens of thousands of years, with many of our native species adapting to survive them. Through human induced climate change, fire regimes are changing, and we are seeing more frequent and severe fires in the alps. This means that the vegetation communities and fauna in the alpine zone that have evolved to low intensity and infrequent fires are less likely to be able to regenerate and recover. Changes in the fire regime leads to greater stress on ecosystems, including nutrient and habitat loss, vegetation change, and higher rates of biodiversity loss and extinction.
Plants regenerate from fire with different mechanisms. Some plants resprout from their base via lignotubers, some shoot leaves out from their trunk (epicormic growth), and some establish from seed. With more frequent fires, species such as Alpine Ash that take 15-20 years to reach maturity, may not get the chance to produce seeds before the next fire destroys them. Higher intensity fires kill seed bank within the soil as the heat is too severe. They can consume tree crowns rather than just scorch them, further reducing seeds that could be released that aren’t already in the soil.
Snow Gums are the most cold-tolerant species of Eucalyptus, growing at higher elevations than any other tree in Australia. Over 90 percent of Victorian Snow Gums have been burnt since 2003. Each of the large fires of the last 15 years have covered some of the same ground, leaving thousands of hectares of Snow Gums burned two or three times. Theses more frequent burns exhausted lignotuber energy stores and resulted in Snow Gum stands dying.
Alpine Bog and fen communities suffer greatly from fire. Fire can dry out areas that need to be waterlogged for the vegetation to survive. Bog plants can’t grow without water, meaning peat can no longer be produced. In most years, because the vegetation is so wet, it is unlikely to be able to carry fire, but with more intense fires and a drier, warmer climate it could be very detrimental for these important communities. Fire in peatlands also releases the stored carbon, that then pollutes the atmosphere. More bare soil from fire increases the chances for weeds to grow.
Animals have evolved strategies to survive fires over time. Some escape by retreating from the area, while others take refuge in burrows, hollows, waterways, in the tops of trees and other sheltered sites. Animals who survive the fire itself face a reduction of food and habitat, as well as greater exposure to predators. There can be different impacts of fire depending on the season. If a fire comes through in spring, it can disrupt many species breeding season. Breeding attempts can reduce due to the stress of habitat loss and food reduction, and offspring are less likely to survive. As the fire regimes are changing, the greater intensity fires that burn hotter can unfortunately injure or kill wildlife that refuge in places that would usually be safe in a lower intensity fire.
There has been some great work by organisations and volunteers in revegetation post fire, as well as fire suppression works around the fire season. The best way we can reduce the effects of increasing fire risk in the alps, and worldwide, is to reduce our contribution to global warming rapidly.
Learn more about fires in the alps here: The Australian Alps Education Kit - Fire and the Australian Alps factsheet (theaustralianalpsnationalparks.org)
And here: Fire regimes that cause declines in biodiversity (dcceew.gov.au)
FLORA
Falls Creek encompasses 13 of the 16 ecological vegetation classes. Vegetation classes include alpine grassy heathlands, alpine damp grassland, sub-alpine wet heathland/alpine valley peatland mosaic, sub-alpine shrublands and grasslands, sub-alpine woodlands, and montane dry woodland.
Dominant vegetation type changes with elevation. As you travel up to Falls Creek from the valley you will be able to see the transition in vegetation communities. These changes are due to different soil characteristics and climatic factors. There are four zones- foothills, montane, subalpine and alpine.
Foothills (elevation below about 900m): Dry open forest and grassy woodlands are common, with well-spaced trees, and grasses and small shrubs in the understorey. Usually, this area comprises of trees between 10 and 30m tall.
Montane zone (around 900m-1500m): The precipitation is higher, and the forest becomes taller, more dense and darker. The dominant trees are a mixture of tall eucalyptus species including Broad and Narrow Leafed Peppermint, White Gum and Mountain Gum. The understorey contains ferns and small trees. Soil is deep and contains lots of organic matter. At the higher elevations of about 1400m within the montane zone, there is a band of tall open forest with the dominant tree being Alpine Ash. Only a few small trees and shrubs make up the forest floor at this altitude.
Subalpine zone (around 1500m-1800m): Here there is an abrupt change from tall trees to low growing woodland dominated by Snow Gums. Snow Gums are specially adapted to withstand the low temperatures, prevailing winds and snow. In the understorey there are low growing shrubs, grasses and herbs. There are some treeless areas in this zone due to cold air settling down in valleys in the topography (frost hollows), creating alpine conditions in small pockets at lower elevations. Soil in the subalpine zone is shallow and less fertile as microbes are slower at breaking down leaf litter at lower temperatures.
Alpine zone (above 1800m): there are no trees, as the temperatures are too extreme and areas too wind exposed to survive year-round. The average mid-summer temperature in this area is around 10 degrees. This area is characterised by grassland, heathland, herb fields, bogs, fens and rocky pavements. Plants here are low to the ground and are generally less that 1m tall as they have adapted to survive cold and wind exposure. The soil is varied, with shallow, well-drained soil on the peaks, loam soils on gentle slopes and waterlogged peat in low lying bogs.
Within the alpine zone there are snowpatch communities. These are found where snow accumulates on the leeward sides of slopes and doesn’t melt until around summer. Only the hardiest plants adapted to the cold temperatures can grow in these areas, including the Alpine Marsh Marigold which grows and flowers under melting snow.
Alpine Bog and Alpine Snowpatch are listed communities under the Flora and Fauna Guarantee Act 1988 (Vic) and the Amendment Act 2019 (Vic). This means they are of national significance and are legally protected. The Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 (EPBC Act) is Australia's main environmental law. It gives us a legal framework to protect and manage unique plants, animals, habitats and places. At Falls Creek in 2024, there are 152 listed threatened flora species on the FFG Act and 4 on the EPBC Act. Some of our critically endangered species include the Silky Snow Daisy, White Billy Button, Mountain Swainson Pea, Bog Willow Herb and Bogong Sally. There are over 700 recorded native plant species within 5km of the heart of Falls Creek.
Threats to vegetation communities include pest animals and plants, pollution, fire, rising temperatures with climate change, and increasing infrastructure. FCAR have a number of different programs aimed at reducing introduced species and rehabilitating areas. In addition FCAR supports over 32 research projects with 10 institutions involving threatened species, pest animal and plant research, climate change studies and more.
There is beautiful, unique vegetation up at Falls Creek and on the surrounding Bogong High Plains that don’t exist anywhere else in the world. It’s important we look after them so that they continue to survive into the future.
Brochure to identify plants and weeds: Plants-of-the-Alpine-Region-Guide-1.pdf (fallscreek.com.au)
Learn more about alpine vegetation here: The Australian Alps Education Kit - Vegetation and the Australian Alps factsheet (theaustralianalpsnationalparks.org)
FFG Act: Flora and Fauna Guarantee Act 1988 | legislation.vic.gov.au
LEAVE NO TRACE
The 7 Principles of Leave No Trace are minimum impact practices that anyone visiting the outdoors should practice and be aware of. They can be applied anywhere, including wilderness areas, local parks and even in your backyard.
Learn about the 7 leave no trace principles here: 7 PRINCIPLES OF LEAVE NO TRACE - Leave No Trace Australia (vslnt.com)
CITIZEN SCIENCE
Science needs our help to obtain data on environmental topics!
Snowgum dieback and Longicorn beetle monitoring
At Falls Creek and in Alpine National Park there is a problem with a native wood-boring beetle called the Longicorn Beetle (Phoracantha sp.). Longicorn beetles have been damaging and decimating strongholds of Snow Gums (Eucalyptus pauciflora) in recent years. They burrow under the bark, leaving signs of bore holes and circular rings, devouring the higher branches of the trees before working their way down.
It is thought that climate change is helping the spread of Snow Gum dieback (signs of wood-boring infestation), as Longicorn Beetles attack drought stressed trees, and can hatch and grow up to 75% faster in warmer weather. Snow gums are facing the prospect of ecological collapse from several threats, including from drought, limited viable habitat, increased frequency and intensity of fire, and the effects of this small beetle. Unfortunately, because Longicorn Beetles can continuously bore in a tree, the tree’s strategies for survival are ineffective with the ongoing stress. Eventually the tree’s carbohydrate stores dry up and it can no longer regenerate.
By reporting signs of Longicorn Beetle damage to Snow Gums, you can play a role in helping determine where Snow Gums have been affected.
Report Longicorn sightings here: ArcGIS Survey123
Report Snow Gum dieback here: Snow-gum dieback web reporter (arcgis.com) Report | Save Our Snow Gum
Snowpatch monitoring
Little is known about how seasonal variation of snow cover affects snow patches (late lying snow that lasts well past winter), or how this impacts the vegetation communities that rely on them. Climate change is impacting the amount and distribution of snow, so by monitoring snow patch extent, formation and melt, researchers can better understand the potential changes to vegetation communities that need snow patches for their survival. Some of the plants that are part of a snow patch community can include Alpine Marsh Marigolds (which flower under the snow!), Tasmanian Bladderwort, Silky Snow Daisies and Alpine Sundews.
You can take a photo of the snow patch at the snow patch monitoring photo point on Pretty Valley Road and upload it via the QR code here: Falls Creek - Environmental - Snowpatch Monitoring Photo Point Version.2.pdf - All Documents (sharepoint.com)
Bogong moth monitoring
Monitoring Bogong Moths helps scientists know what the annual variation in biomass is available to Mountain Pygmy Possums and other small mammals, reptiles and birds that rely on them for survival. Moth tracking also helps establish their patterns in migration. New knowledge from the Tracker will be used to inform decision making about future conservation and recovery efforts for the endangered Mountain Pygmy Possum.
If you see a Bogong Moth, you can upload your sighting here: Moth Tracker (swifft.net.au)
Watch a video about Bogong Moth decline: Bogong moth among 124 Australian wildlife additions to endangered species list (youtube.com)
Feral animal monitoring
You can help researchers gather information on the introduced species impacting the environment by reporting feral animals such as cats, foxes, rabbits, hares, deer and horses in Falls Creek and in the surrounding national park. Data is used for targeted responses to reduce the impacts they pose on native wildlife.
Report introduced species here: FeralScan
Links to citizen science apps and websites:
Weeds- WeedScan
Wildlife- A Community for Naturalists · iNaturalist
Frogs- Home | Australian Museum FrogID Project
LEARNING RESOURCES AND ID GUIDES
Falls Creek Resort Management has worked with our North East Waste Resource Recovery Group partners to create an education series about alpine biodiversity and how you can help protect our alpine environment through the decisions you make about food waste.
There are three videos in the series:
Zoos Victoria teaching resources and information on specific species: Animal Teaching Resources (zoo.org.au)
DEECA fact sheets and wildlife news: wildlife.vic.gov.au