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West Gippsland CMA highlights tree power for catchment and inlet health through tree planting while protecting water

This National Tree Day, West Gippsland CMA highlights trees' role in improving water quality and biodiversity through revegetation works supporting the Corner Inlet Ramsar site and broader catchment health.

By news@gippsland - 23rd July 2025 - Back to News

Trees grow from seeds that spring from a pod, so this National Tree Day, West Gippsland CMA is sowing the seed of just how important trees are for catchments with a special podcast that demonstrates the true superpower of trees.

Matt Bowler and Richard Allen planting trees on a job site

Matt Bowler and Richard Allen planting trees on a job site

Protecting water quality

On a picturesque farm just out of Foster, a small patch of remnant bush sits adjacent to paddocks where sheep and cattle graze. A lone creek trickles through the farm, its banks boggy and eroded due to years of stock grazing. This creek eventually flows into the world renowned Corner Inlet Ramsar Site - so what happens in this paddock has an impact on water quality in the inlet.

That's why the CMA team is hard at work planting the next generation of trees next to Old Hat Creek - trees that will work hard to give homes for wildlife and help to stabilize banks and keep the waterway flowing, ultimately improving water quality downstream in Corner Inlet.

"Trees are a cornerstone of the CMA's Corner Inlet Flagship project that aims to address water quality risks to the ecological character of the Corner Inlet Ramsar site and connect habitat along the waterways that flow into it," said Tanya Cowell, Waterways Project Officer for West Gippsland CMA.

Trees ready for planting

Trees ready for planting

Restoring Corner Inlet

Tanya also said, "Our vision is that by 2040, the waterways of the Corner Inlet Basin will be fringed with diverse and connected corridors of native vegetation, and the land managed to reduce downstream environmental impacts to protect the inlet's valuable seagrass communities. There are community benefits too: improved raw water quality for drinking and industry, amenity of the landscape, and continued access to Victoria's last sustainable bay and inlet fishery."

Planting trees is often the last, exciting step of a revegetation project. On this Foster property, four hectares of weed control and two kilometres of fencing were completed before the mix of 5,000 carefully selected shrubs and trees could be put in the ground. Planning for such intricate restoration takes a wealth of knowledge and passionate supporters.

Planting with purpose

Matt Bowler, Project Delivery Manager for the CMA who is one of those knowledge holders said, "Putting a tree in the ground is the result of years of planning, and we work with locals who have an intimate knowledge and vast experience of growing trees endemic to the Gippsland region. We are lucky that we have a network and community that supports the seed collection, growing and planting process."

"We have great trust that what we plant will grow because they are suited to the soils and the conditions. When you plant a tree, you are doing it for future generations but in South Gippsland, we get to see the results more quickly because trees grow fast. You plant a tree in south Gippsland you can have a koala in the tree in five years," said Matt.

\Richard Allen planting trees at Old Hat Creek, Foster

Richard Allen planting trees at Old Hat Creek, Foster

Growing future forests

Matt and colleague Richard Allen have planted millions of seedlings which they love seeing grow into forests that will become the next remnant forests as they drive across the catchment. They learn a lot from each planting project using lessons learned to help improve our future works. "Linking plantings along waterways in a catchment makes sense to us - it protects the creek and creates linkages for wildlife, and tree-loving is infectious!" said Matt.

The Corner Inlet Flagship project is supported by the Victorian Government through the Victorian Waterways Management Program. West Gippsland CMA is responsible for over 40,000 kilometres of designated waterways across the region and delivers programs for healthy and resilient catchments. All these waterways flow to the Victorian coast, discharging through the Gippsland Lakes, or directly into Bass Strait and the Southern Ocean.

Pictures from West Gippsland Catchment Management Authority website.


Source: http://gippsland.com/

Published by: news@gippsland.com



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