Thank you to all our volunteers and partners for contributing to our successful conservation initiatives on Wadjemup

  • $150,000 - HBF Upgrade to the Wadjemup Nursery

    $186,188 - Lotterywest Conservation of the Aboriginal Burial Ground

    $559,100 - BHP Billiton Construction of Wardan Nara and Karlinya sections of the Wadjemup Bidi

  • $102,495 - To the Museum

    $66,000 - To Quokka Habitat Rehabilitation

    $20,000 - For the Quokka Monitoring Program

  • $75,000 - North Thomson Stairs, Gabby Karniny Bidi

    $200,000 - West End Boardwalk

    $30,000 - Kingstown Barracks ‘Discovery Centre’

Rottnest Foundation Members’ volunteer contribution to our tree-planting and rehabilitation programs

2025 Save the date: Saturday, 15 November

2024

610 trees were planted to revegetate the woodlands surrounding Wadjemup Lighthouse. 50 bags of sea spurge were removed from Parakeet Bay to enable the growth and expansion of native species.

2023

1638 woodlands species, propagated from the Island’s nursery were planted at Woodland site #19230 and #19230. Foundation members also partnered with members of the Marjorie Bay boating community, planting 566 coastal species, complete with tree guards to ensure they survived the local quokka population.

2022

732 plants, propagated from the Island’s nursery, were planted at Woodlands site 19550. 763 seedlings were planted, and quokka guards fitted at Longreach Bay coastal area.

2021

1,600 coastal species were planted at Longreach Bay to stabilise the dune system, provide habitat for fauna and mitigate further erosion. Tree-guard removal was undertaken at Eagle and Marjorie Bays.

2020

6,400 salt-marsh seedlings, over two weekends to support salt-marsh rehabilitation at Herschel Lake. Made possible with an $18,000 Communities Environmental Program grant awarded to the Foundation.

2019

1,500 salt-marsh species were planted to revegetate the foreshore of Garden Lake. Coastal species were used to arrest dune erosion and manage visitor access to a large osprey stack at West Marjorie Bay.

2018

1,500 seedlings were used to close off ad hoc trails, stabilise dunes and manage visitor traffic at Rocky Bay on the Karlinyah Bidi. A beach clean-up and sea spurge removal, an invasive species from northern Africa, was undertaken along Ricey Beach.

2017

1,000 seedlings were planted with protective tree-guards to manage visitor access at Eagle Bay. Foundation members then partnered with Rottnest Express staff to plant 1,000 seedlings with tree-guards to arrest a blow-out and rehabilitate habitat at Green Island.

2016

Foundation members in partnership with Rottnest Express planted 1,800 plants with tree-guards to close old beach access into Ricey Beach

2015

823 seedlings were planted around then newly constructed Seal Viewing Platform at Cathedral Rocks. Due to nesting shearwaters, the site was heavily brushed to deter quokka grazing.

Make a difference.

 
CONSERVATION DONATION
QUOKKA DONATION
 

You can make a real difference to the conservation of Rottnest Island and ensure that the Island remains that special place we all love for its unique beauty and heritage.

A “Conservation Donation” will contribute to supporting projects that protect and enhance Rottnest Island’s unique environmental, cultural and heritage assets for future generations.

With a “Quokka Donation” you are helping Rottnest Foundation support ongoing conservation projects that protect and preserve the habitat for Quokkas and ongoing quokka monitoring programs.