Creating Aldinga Conservation Park
Aldinga Conservation Park in Adelaide’s southern fringe, was proclaimed in January 2022, bringing together land from the former Aldinga Scrub Conservation Park and the Aldinga Washpool, into one consolidated conservation park.
Prior to European colonisation, the Aldinga Washpool was an important place for Kaurna people to cure and dry possum skins, and it remains a significant spiritual and cultural site to the Kaurna people today.
The 340 hectares of conservation land includes 67 hectares of high biodiversity land, which provides valuable habitat for at least 79 native species.
Among these species is three bird species of national conservation significance – the Australasian bittern (Botaurus poiciloptilus), the Australian painted snipe (Rostratula australis) and the hooded plover (Thinornis rubricollis).
Consolidating these adjacent conservation areas into one park has been a priority for the state and local governments and the community and enables an even greater level of protection to the habitat and species under the National Parks and Wildlife Act 1972.
Project origins
The Aldinga Washpool site originally spanned a number of land tenures, owned by various government agencies including the City of Onkaparinga, SA Water, the Department for Environment and Water and the Minister for Planning and Local Government.
The various land owners have worked collaboratively for a number of years to realise conservation and management outcomes and consolidate land tenure to allow proclamation to occur. A small number of land parcels adjacent to the proclaimed area are subject to resolution of land tenure issues and are still under consideration for possible future inclusion in the park.
The community has long expressed a strong desire for the land to be protected from development and for the cultural and environmental values to be protected and restored.
Aldinga Scrub
The land occupied by the former Aldinga Scrub Conservation Park, which is now part of the Aldinga Conservation Park, is home to a diverse range of rare plants and is recognised as a significant area for the conservation and protection of the region’s flora and fauna.
Situated in the Willunga sub-basin, the former Aldinga Scrub Conservation Park features an impressive backdrop of sand dunes, sand blows (mobile dunes) and remnant coastal vegetation.
Lacy coral lichen, nardoo, hairy sedge and several species of orchids are among the park’s rare species of flora. Remember to look out for the short-beaked echidnas, lizards, bats and the diverse range of birds that live in the park.
Aldinga Washpool
The Aldinga Washpool is 50 km south of Adelaide and one of Adelaide’s last remaining coastal freshwater and estuarine lagoon systems. It is an important environmental asset within the Aldinga Conservation Park.
It is a well-known habitat for a wide range of native species, particularly birds and swamp plants, many of which have significant conservation value.
This includes a threatened coastal saltmarsh which is nationally listed as a vulnerable threatened ecological community.
The washpool site is also of considerable spiritual and cultural significance to the Kaurna people. It is part of the Tjilbruke Dreaming Trail and contains registered sites under the Aboriginal Heritage Act 1988 (SA), including numerous archaeological sites and artefacts.
Park Management Plan
A new management plan for Aldinga Conservation Park, which is made up of the former Aldinga Scrub Conservation Park and the Aldinga Washpool, will be developed to reflect the co-management structure for the park. It will be developed in collaboration with the Kaurna Parks Advisory Committee.
To the Kaurna People, the park is a place of cultural and spiritual significance and a place where Kaurna, and other Aboriginal groups, have gathered for thousands of years. This importance will be reflected throughout the park management plan and will be informed by the Kaurna Parks Advisory Committee.
The new management plan will set the strategic direction for park planning and management for the Aldinga Conservation Park taking into account the cultural heritage significance to the Kaurna People, high biodiversity value, community stewardship, nature based recreational experiences that connect people to nature and fire management that will reduce the risk to people, property and the environment.
Visiting Aldinga Conservation Park
Visitors are welcome at Aldinga Conservation Park and can enjoy activities like bushwalking and fishing in the area of the park formerly dedicated to Aldinga Scrub Conservation Park, but should note that facilities and access is limited in the washpool section of the park.
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