Brogo Reserve

The Brogo Reserve is a 120-hectare (300-acre) nature reserve, owned (since 1995) and managed by Bush Heritage Australia, located at the north-eastern end of the Bega Valley in south-eastern New South Wales409 kilometres (254 mi) south of Sydney and 30 kilometres (19 mi) north of Bega.

Brogo Reserve
New South Wales
Brogo Reserve
Coordinates36°30′38.66″S 149°46′48″E
Established1995[1]
Area1.2 km2 (0.5 sq mi)[1]
Managing authoritiesBush Heritage Australia
WebsiteBrogo Reserve

Features

Landscape and vegetation

Brogo encompasses three forested ridges, with granite outcrops, separated by fern gullies. Habitat types include riparian oak forest along the Brogo River, dry grass forest, dry rainforest and wet shrub forest.[1]

Fauna

Mammal species present on Brogo include the sugar glider, common wombat and long-nosed bandicoot. Bird species include the powerful owl.[1]

gollark: What?
gollark: The argument for land value tax is that it's apparently more economically efficient in some way than income taxes, and inasmuch as nobody actually produces land/natural resources value derived from them should go to everyone.
gollark: Case-by-case-basis handling is pretty problematic. In markets, you have the convenient answer of "whoever pays more".
gollark: Oh, and land value tax is a neat idea.
gollark: I think market systems are waaay better than some weird communist one at resource allocation (with intervention), so I'd prefer markets + limited central governance.

See also

References

  1. "Brogo Reserve". Places we protect. Bush Heritage Australia. Retrieved 31 August 2012.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.