Port Campbell National Park Explained

Type:protected
Port Campbell National Park
State:vic
Iucn Category:II
Coordinates:-38.6506°N 143.0628°W
Relief:yes
Pushpin Label Position:top
Local Map:yes
Zoom:9
Nearest Town Or City:Port Campbell
Area:17.5
Area Footnotes:[1]
Visitation Num:circa
Visitation Year:1998
Managing Authorities:Parks Victoria
Url:https://www.parks.vic.gov.au/places-to-see/parks/port-campbell-national-park

The Port Campbell National Park is a national park in the south-western district of Victoria, Australia. The 1750ha national park is situated approximately south-west of Melbourne and approximately east of Warrnambool. The park is located adjacent to the Great Otway National Park and the Bay of Islands Coastal Park.

History

The Port Campbell National Park was dedicated on,[1] initially with 700ha, in order to protect the limestone formations on and near the coastline adjacent to the Great Ocean Road. By 1981 the park had grown to 1750ha; extending from the eastern side of Curdies Inlet at Peterborough to Point Ronald at Princetown.[2] In 2002, the Port Campbell Professional Fishermen's Association unsuccessfully attempted to block the creation of a proposed marine national park at the Twelve Apostles location,[3] but were satisfied with the later Victorian Government decision not to allow seismic exploration at the same site by Benaris Energy;[4] believing it would harm marine life.[5]

Features

The Port Campbell National Park features an array of sheer cliffs overlooking offshore islets, rock stacks, gorges, arches, and blow-holes. As part of the Shipwreck Coast,[6] it hosts several tourist attractions; including The Twelve Apostles, the London Bridge, Loch Ard Gorge, the Gibson Steps, and The Grotto.

The park is subject to salt-laden breezes, and the cliff-tops are particularly exposed to the harsh weather conditions from the Southern Ocean. However, fragile grasslands and heaths are still able to develop, supporting plant species such as sun orchid and spider orchid. In protected areas, plant life includes beard-heath, bower spinach, coast daisy bush, daisies and cushion bush. The wilder terrain hosts an assortment of she-oaks, dogwoods, correa, messmate, trailing guinea-flower, woolly tea-tree and scented paperbark.

The fauna in the park is largely ornithological; and includes honeyeaters, southern emu and fairy wrens, swamp harriers, rufous bristlebird, peregrine falcons, pelicans, ducks, black swans and egrets. Penguins, terns and dotterels are located along the shoreline, with hooded plovers nesting in exposed locations. Australasian gannets, wandering albatrosses and short-tailed shearwaters live out at sea. Land animals in the park include southern brown bandicoot, swamp antechinuse and echidna.[7]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Port Campbell National Park and Bay of Islands Coastal Park management plan. PDF. Parks Victoria. Government of Victoria. September 1998. 0-7311-3133-9. 25 August 2014. 3–5, 26. https://web.archive.org/web/20160304041914/http://parkweb.vic.gov.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0020/313373/Port-Campbell-National-Park-and-Bay-of-Islands-Coastal-Park-Plan.pdf. 4 March 2016. dead.
  2. News: Port Campbell. 8 February 2004. 27 May 2010. The Sydney Morning Herald.
  3. Web site: Port Campbell bid to block marine national park. 17 June 2010. 15 April 2002. Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
  4. News: Fishermen welcome decision against national park seismic exploration. 17 June 2010. 17 October 2003. ABC News. Australia.
  5. News: Otway Basin seismic survey work set to start. 17 June 2010. 21 October 2003. ABC News. Australia.
  6. News: A vision splendid. 23 November 2002. 17 June 2010. The Sydney Morning Herald.
  7. News: Port Campbell – Places to See. 17 June 2010. The Age.