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Keywords
Climate (campaign title)
Close ups
Day
Endangered species
Forests (topography)
KWCI (GPI)
Lizards
Nature
Outdoors
Reptiles

Leard State Forest in Australia

A legless lizard on a log in the Leard State Forest in Northwest New South Wales near the mining town of Boggabri. The forest is the largest vegetation remnant left on the Liverpool Plains and is home to 396 flora and fauna species including 34 threatened species. 
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Leard State Forest in Australia

Leard State Forest in NW New South Wales includes the most extensive and intact stands of the nationally-listed and critically endangered Box-Gum Woodland remaining on the Australian continent. The forest is home to 396 species of plants and animals and includes habitat for 34 threatened species and several endangered ecological communities. Two open-cut coal mines are already operating and have approval to expand further into Leard State Forest. A third open-cut coal mine, Maules Creek Coal Mine owned by Whitehaven Coal, is approved and expected to begin production in 2015. Together these mines will clear approximately 5000 hectares, more than half of Leard State Forest, and produce 20 million tonnes of coal that will be railed to the Port of Newcastle for export. Maules Creek is the largest coal mine currently under construction in Australia. Farmers, Traditional Owners, national and local environment groups and local residents have been blockading Whitehaven’s construction efforts. 
Conceptually similar
Unique identifier: GP0STO7QY 
Type: Image 
Shoot date: 04/09/2013 
Locations: Australia, New South Wales, Oceania
Credit line: © Abram Powell / Greenpeace 
Size: 5184px × 3456px     12.02 MB 
Ranking: ★★★★ (E)