State News - April 2006
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16/04/06 Death puts spotlight on Leadbeater plight - John Elder - The Age - Central Highlands - April 06
10/04/06 New Forest Blockade Stops Logging near Goolengook - Media Release- - Fiona York - East Gippsland - April 06
A spokesman for Healesville Sanctuary yesterday confirmed that the last captive possum, a male, died on Monday, following the death of its female mate last month. The pair had become too old to breed. - Our highlight
By John Elder - The Age
April 16, 2006
LEADBEATER'S possum was once the tiny comeback kid of Australian wildlife.
Thought to have vanished, the possum was rediscovered alive and struggling in 1961. Ten years later it was made the faunal emblem of Victoria. Now it looks as if we will have to find a new one.
The death of the last Leadbeater in captivity, which was announced yesterday, means the little possum is no longer a promise and symbol of life renewed. In the wild, there are thought to be only a 1000 left.
In what appears to be a last-ditch stand, author Peter Preuss is calling for co-operative effort by Victoria's zoos, the timber industry and the State Government to relaunch a possum breeding program.
Preuss is the biographer of late amateur naturalist Des Hackett, who successfully bred the possums in captivity.
He said efforts to revive the possum's population faltered after Mr Hackett died in 1997, and today the possum's natural habitat was under threat from logging.
Preuss said the last possums in the wild lived in a 50-square-kilometre area in Victoria's central highlands - the mountain ash forests around Noojee, Powelltown, Marysville and Warburton.
In one positive sign, he said possum numbers were increasing in the Yellingbo Nature Reserve, an area of swamp and forest protected for the helmeted honey-eater, Victoria's bird emblem.
"This shows the possums can survive if we give them some nesting boxes," he said.
A spokesman for Healesville Sanctuary yesterday confirmed that the last captive possum, a male, died on Monday, following the death of its female mate last month. The pair had become too old to breed.
With AAP
Media Release
10 April 2006
New Forest Blockade Stops Logging near Goolengook

Goolengook Study Area (in light green) - Victorian Environment Assessment Council
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Media Release
10 April 2006
New Forest Blockade Stops Logging
near GoolengookTwenty people have stopped logging in old growth forest less than 100 metres from the Goolengook forest. Two people are locked to logging machinery, while a tripod and tree platform are preventing access to the logging coupe. The coupe is on the border of the Goolengook block, on the headwaters of the Arte River. It contains old growth forest and rainforest. The Goolengook forest is currently the subject of an investigation by the Victorian Environment Assessment Council (VEAC).
The forest blockade today is the fifteenth in East Gippsland since December. There have been 30 arrests so far and more are expected today.
"While the Goolengook forest is being investigated and under moratorium from logging, forest of comparable value is being logged right on its border," said spokesperson for the conservationists Fiona York.
""Premier Steve Bracks needs to do more than just investigate icon areas for the sake of a few votes. All old growth forest needs to be protected immediately," she continued.
"Logging areas such as these, in the headwaters of the Arte River, not only destroys old growth forest and rainforest, it also destroys the integrity of the iconic Goolengook forest," she concluded.
For more information
Fiona York
0351540174
Links :- ABC Online ; - Geco - Goongerah Environment Centre ; Victoria's biggest tree ; Stories from the front line....eyewitness accounts of blockading and being in East Gippland.; History, technical details, and submissions to Government by Geco in the East Gippsland Forest Campaign