Boorganna Nature Reserve New South Wales | |
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Nearest town or city | Comboyne |
Coordinates | 31°38.015′S 152°23.74′E / 31.633583°S 152.39567°E |
Established | 12 March 1904[2] |
Area | 4 km2 (1.5 sq mi)[3] |
Managing authorities | NSW National Parks & Wildlife Service |
Website | Boorganna Nature Reserve |
See also | Protected areas of New South Wales |
The Boorganna Nature Reserve is a protected nature reserve located northwest of Taree on the Comboyne Plateau in New South Wales, Australia. The 396-hectare (980-acre) reserve, managed by the NSW National Parks & Wildlife Service, was gazetted in 1904 and is the second oldest nature reserve in the state. The reserve features various forest types, including stands of sub tropical rainforest of which the large rosewood, yellow carabeen and small leaf fig are particularly noteworthy.[3] The reserve is a remnant of the former extensive rainforest on the Comboyne Plateau. The plateau was cleared between 1900 and 1925. Australian red cedar was logged in the area in the nineteenth century. Originally proposed to be part of the world heritage rainforest group.[4] The exploration, knowledge, uses and history of this area by Indigenous Australians is not well known in the present day. Boorganna Nature Reserve was proposed, but rejected for inclusion on the UNESCO World Heritage, due to being geographically isolated from other rainforests in the group.
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