Document ID: chunk:federal_register_of_legislation:F2022L00555:body:0:p3
Version: federal_register_of_legislation:F2022L00555
Segment Type: other
Provision Reference: 
Character Range: 5823–8883

ecology and demography
27.1 Reproduction
27.2 Demography
27.3 Movement patterns
28. Foraging ecology
29. Physiology
References
Appendices
Appendix 1 Costings
Appendix 2 EPBC Act-listed fauna
Appendix 3 Predicted habitat loss under climate change
Appendix 4 2019–2020 fire extent
List of figures
Figure 1. Modelled distribution (geographic range) of the listed Koala and unlisted Koala
Figure 2. Summary of the structural overview of the relationship between the
supporting strategies and the on-ground strategies to meet the recovery plan's goal
Figure 3. Policies, programs, strategies and regulations at all levels of local, state,
 territory and Australian governments that relate to the listed Koala recovery
Figure 4. Stylistic representation of the relationships between land use change affecting the landscape and Koala habitat, and Koala populations, exacerbated by climate change and natural systems change
Figure 5. Proposed governance structure of the National Koala Monitoring Program and
relationship with the National Koala Recovery Plan, and the state and territory strategies and
plans, and committees
Figure 6. Predicted listed Koala distribution in 2070 under a high global emissions scenario (RCP8.5) considering the impacts of climate-change driven changes to droughts and heatwaves on Koalas
List of tables
Table 1: International, national, state and territory conservation status of the Koala
Table 2. Proportion of forest or woodland by land tenure across the listed Koala's
modelled habitat and states
Table 3. Estimated losses of Koala distribution due to climate change under a high
global-emissions scenario (A1FI or RCP8.5)
Table 4. The area and percentage of land burned in the 2019–2020 summer bushfires
by Natural Resource Management (NRM) areas within the area where the listed Koala
and its habitat for known or likely to occur
Table 5. Methods used to describe genetic diversity in the Koala, their benefits and limitations

Acknowledgement of Country
We acknowledge the traditional custodians of Australia. We recognise their continuing connection to the land and waters, and thank them for protecting this country and its ecosystems since time immemorial. We pay our respects to Elders past and present, and extend that respect to all Indigenous Australians.
Open grey box (Eucalyptus macrocarpa) woodlands, central NSW. Image: © S. Brown.

Acknowledgements
This plan represents the combined efforts of many people, including those who have directly contributed to the content of the plan, those whose site and management action information has been captured, and those who have built the knowledge and understanding on which this plan relies.
Due to the vast number of contributors who have provided inputs to this plan representing the interests of a diverse range of stakeholder groups including traditional owners, land managers, landowners, conservation organisations, researchers, Koala friends' groups and government agencies, attempting to list them all would be impractical and risk missing someone unintentionally.