Waychinicup National Park is in Western Australia, 404 kilometres (251 mi) southeast of Perth and 65 kilometres (40 mi) east of Albany, along the coast of the Southern Ocean.
Location and description
The park is bordered by the Southern Ocean to the south, Mount Manypeaks Nature Reserve to the east, and agricultural land to the north. Its coastline runs between Normans Beach and Cheynes Beach, near Bremer Bay.[2]
The park offers and array of landscapes, from the rugged coast to boulder-strewn hilltops. Tree-filled, deeply-incised valleys have freshwater streams flowing through them, with moss-covered boulders. Facilities provided include a camping area and bush toilet near the inlet of the Waychinicup River.[3]
Bald Island Nature Reserve is located offshore nearby.[4]
Fauna
Mammals
The park is home to some of the rarest animals in Australia. Species found in the park include the quenda, ring tailed possums and one of the few mainland populations of quokkas.[5]
In 2010, an insurance population of Gilbert's potoroo was established within an enclosure at the park,[6] as a short-term measure, but it was found in 2015 that native carpet pythons were getting into the enclosure and preying on the marsupials.[7] As of December 2018 there were 20 of the critically endangered marsupials in the park, representing a fifth of the total remaining population in the world.[8]
The western bristlebird is another vulnerable species that is found within the park. Most of the birds remaining population is found in Two Peoples Bay Nature Reserve and Waychinicup National Park.[11]Populations of the bird that have been on the decline since the late 19th century has started to stabilise.
^ National Environmental Science Program Threatened Species Research Hub (2019). Gilbert's Potoroo, Potorous gilbertii (Report). Threatened Species Strategy – Year 3 Priority Species Scorecard (2018. Australian Government. PDF
^BirdLife International. (2011). Important Bird Areas factsheet: Two Peoples Bay and Mount Manypeaks. Downloaded from http://www.birdlife.org on 18 November 2011.