Priority

Climate Change Action

Climate Change Mitigation & Adaption

Climate change poses a fundamental long-term threat to biodiversity.

To give wildlife and plants the best chance of adapting to a warmer, more extreme world, we need to urgently safeguard habitat from threats like land clearing, fragmentation and introduced species.

Trust for Nature’s unique power to permanently protect habitat on private land not only helps wildlife adapt, it also helps mitigate climate change by preventing carbon from being released into the atmosphere. And by protecting at a landscape scale, we can prevent fragmentation and achieve resilience at the ecosystem level, providing nature the best chance to respond to climate shock.

Protecting Habitat to Fight Climate Change

Destroying habitat is a major source of greenhouse gas emissions.

Trees and other plants absorb carbon dioxide and use it to grow. When forest and woodland is cleared, that carbon is released into the atmosphere. Less vegetation and less healthy ecosystems reduce the ability of the land to absorb carbon.

Protecting habitat prevents carbon being released into the atmosphere through clearing. Restoring and improving native vegetation can help reduce the amount of carbon in the atmosphere, as long as greenhouse gas emissions fall in other parts of society too.

Habitat protected through Trust for Nature stores 4.2 million tonnes of carbon. By protecting even more wetlands, grasslands, forests and woodlands, we can ensure that Victoria’s environment helps us fight climate change.

Improving Resilience

Animals, plants and ecosystems are already experiencing the effects of climate change. 
Reduced rainfall shortens growing seasons and decreases the availability of food, habitat and water. Higher temperatures impose stresses on species, which can lead to reduced breeding success or more animals and plants dying.

Climate change can also trigger shifts in the distribution of plants and animals, flowering times and mating seasons, and disrupt migratory patterns.

By protecting and improving habitat, we can create refuges for species in a changing climate. Tackling other threats like introduced species will make habitat more resilient.  

Our State-wide Conservation Plan identifies the areas of Victoria that provide the best refuges for animals and plants. These are priorities for Trust for Nature to protect in the coming decades.

Checklist for Landholders

If you are a Trust for Nature covenantor you are already taking vital action to reduce the impacts of climate change. Use the checklist below to find out what other steps you can take.
Protect Habitat
Protect habitat forever with a conservation covenant
Fence habitat from grazing animals
Protect habitat features from threats (e.g. old trees, rock outcrops, ponds)
Manage Threats
Control feral animals to protect native plants and wildlife
Manage impacts of over-abundant native kangaroos on native vegetation through fencing or authorised control
Control soil erosion
Connect and Improve my bit of nature
Revegetate cleared land
Provide habitat links between isolated patches
Work with neighbours/local conservation groups to increase
extent of native vegetation
Improve Habitat
Increase plant diversity
Establish missing keystone species
Thin trees where they are unnaturally dense
Maintain or increase fallen wood
Provide water in dry times for wildlife
Install nest boxes
Restore inflows to wetlands and waterways