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Australian Koala Foundation (AKF)
Activities and Programs

Current projects

The long-term survival of the koala depends on the retention and effective management of suitable habitat to support koalas in the wild. The future of this species will not be sustainable in captivity.

The AKF has several ongoing projects dedicated to saving the wild koala through conserving its habitat and raising funds to enable the AKF to continue running despite its not-for-profit policy. These include:

1.Koala Beach:
This housing estate in northern New South Wales was the result of collaboration between The Ray Group of developers and the AKF. It is the first property to be master planned and designed with the protection of the environment as its priority, with the community making conscious compromises to its lifestyle so that it can co-exist with wild koalas.

2.Koala Habitat Atlas:
This project involves the mapping, identifying and quantifying of koala habitat throughout the koala''s geographic range. It aims to identify which trees are preferentially used by koalas and to identify and rank koala habitat on a shire by shire basis.

3.Koala Campaigners:
Koalas and their habitat do not receive adequate protection under the current legislation. Members of the public who join Koala Campaigners send emails to Australia''s Environment Minister, the Hon Peter Garrett AM, MP to urge a meaningful review of the National Koala Conservation Strategy and provide effective legislation.


Achievements
It is safe to say that the AKF has made a difference in its 20 years of operation, and all without government funding. Its most outstanding achievements are as follows.

1.Legislature and endangered listings status: In 2003, the Queensland State Government listed Southeast Queensland''s koalas as ''vulnerable'' under the Nature Conservation Act 1992 after the AKF''s research made compelling findings. The AKF has appealed on multiple occasions to both state and federal governments, but the governments have failed to make any substantial changes to legislature affording the wild koala effective protection.

2.Cooperative development: The partnership between the AKF and the Ray Group has resulted in Koala Beach, a residential estate that is koala-friendly and proof that development and wildlife protection are not necessarily incompatible.

3.Research: The AKF is the world''s largest funding body of koala research. Research findings include the contribution made by koalas to Australia''s tourism industry and viability studies on koala populations in various bioregions.

4.Mapping: More than 40,000 km² of land has been mapped for the Koala Habitat Atlas. Unlike other mapping projects, the Atlas does not merely pinpoint the location of individuals in the species. It displays the occurrence of suitable koala habitat (even if there are no koalas there at present) that can be ''restocked'' in future if necessary.

5.Awareness and information: The AKF is recognised as the source of choice for information on koalas. Every year, staff members receive and respond to over 10 000 queries and requests for information. These inquiries come from a diverse range of people, including students, land managers and documentary makers. The AKF''s website records almost one million hits each year.
The Koala only lives on special Bamboo Leaves and Eucalyptus plants. Currently these are being cut down for making space and much of these species are dying.

 
 
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