Saturday, 22 November 2025

Critically endangered orchid thrives as NSW Mid North Coast cemetery provides habitat refuge.

Extract from ABC News

A small delicate yellow orchid flower.

A pale yellow doubletail orchid at a Mid North Coast cemetery. (Supplied: Drew Morris)

In short:

A historical NSW cemetery is providing crucial habitat for a critically endangered orchid.

Conservationists say in rural and urban areas cemeteries often provide protected habitat for rare and endangered plants and animals.

What's next?

Conservation measures are in place to ensure rare flora and fauna are protected when found in cemeteries.

Take a tour of the cemeteries bursting with floral colour. (ABC listen: Story Stream)

Rob Smart is the executive director of operations at Metropolitan Memorial Parks, which runs the cemetery.

"Rookwood Cemetery supports several rare and endangered plant species, including the endangered downy wattle [Acacia pubescens], we [also] have kangaroo grass, and a Rookwood bluebell," Mr Smart said.

"As time goes on  certain areas of the cemetery become a bit more naturally wooded … they are a really great corridor of natural vegetation, with headstones that fauna, small birds and reptiles can actually live amongst."

Orchid hopes

Orchids in particular are sensitive to disturbance and often thrive within protected environments.

A slim tall orchid, with small white flowers.

The Tarengo leek orchid can grow up to 30 centimetres tall and is only found in very limited places. (Supplied: ACT government)

In a rural area of Canberra, the 1883 Hall Cemetery is the only ACT site where the endangered Tarengo leek orchid is found.

Emma Cook, a vegetation ecologist at the ACT government's Office of Nature Conservation, said other rare and threatened plant and animal species were also found in the historical cemetery.

Ms Cook said the site was carefully managed to protect the species, with no general mowing permitted during spring and early summer.

"The critically endangered yellow box, red gum, grassy woodland ecological community that covers the site has remained relatively unimpacted by the agricultural activities that have led to its widespread loss and degradation elsewhere," she said.

"Across Australia, historic cemeteries and Traveling Stock Reserves [parcels of Crown land] both play an important role in landscape connectivity and providing important habitat refuge."

A man crouching down among brown grasses in bushland.

Matt Bell says weed control is one of the measures taken to conserve the orchids on the lower Mid North Coast. (ABC News: Emma Siossian)

On the NSW Mid North Coast, sightings of the pale yellow doubletail in bloom have been few and far between this spring, but Mr Bell said it was not necessarily a reason for concern.

"That flowering variability could be the result of rainfall or other seasonal factors," he said.

"We are still working out a lot of knowledge about this cryptic and very rare plant."

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