Best Practice Management Project
With funding from the Australian Government Regional Land Partnership program and the NSW Saving our Species Program, NRFABCON inc. established the Bell Miner Associated Dieback (BMAD) Best Practice Management Project in 2019.
The project has established long-term monitoring sites across six locations on the New South Wales North Coast to provide for ongoing research into BMAD and its management.
The Best Practice Project aims to provide evidence-based, best practice management advice for landholders dealing with BMAD using common land management practices (weed control, prescribed burning, bush regeneration).
Want a quick round up of BMAD? read a summary by Jim Morrison, former Chair of the NSW BMAD working group. They were responsible for listing BMAD as a Key Threatening Process in NSW
The website is supported with funding by the NSW Saving Our Species Program
Northern Rivers Fire & Biodiversity Consortium inc.
This project is supported by North Coast Local Land Services, through funding from the
Australian Government’s National Landcare Program and the NSW Department of Planning, Industry and Environment
through funding from the Saving Our Species Program.