Document ID: chunk:federal_register_of_legislation:F2025L00287:reg:3:p5
Version: federal_register_of_legislation:F2025L00287
Segment Type: reg
Provision Reference: reg 3 (pt 5/276)
Character Range: 14752–18006

address the Norfolk Marine Park, which is managed under the Temperate East Marine Parks Network Management Plan 2018 (Director of National Parks 2018). The plan replaces the previous Norfolk Island Region Threatened Species Recovery Plan (Director of National Parks 2010).
The plan serves as a formal recovery plan for a specific subset of the threatened species in the Norfolk Island Group, comprising 46 plant species, five bird species and two reptile species (Table 1). It also includes actions for five endemic snails that are listed under the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 (EPBC Act), but which do not require a recovery plan.
Successful implementation of the plan requires coordination by a recovery team made up of agencies with responsibility for land management and other stakeholders, with strong participation by the Norfolk Island community.

    Summary of targets
The plan contains a detailed conceptual framework for management planning based on a hierarchy of outcomes. A long-term vision and goals provide a direction of travel, recognising that the plan is one part of an ongoing process to restore the Norfolk Island Group's biodiversity and ecosystems. Within that context, the plan focuses on a sequence of specific aims for the next ten years, based on delivery of management actions (grouped into management programs), leading to achievement of management targets, in turn leading to achievement of recovery targets for the species (Figure 1). Targets have been set to be sufficiently ambitious to support achieving the vision for 2050 while being achievable within a decade if sufficient resources are available.
Details of each of those three levels of targets are summarised below (with full details in Part 4—Management planning). They are presented in the reverse of the order in Figure 1, on the basis that planning starts with defining desired outcomes and works back to identify relevant intermediate targets and required actions.
Figure 1 Sequence of management programs and targets over the life of the plan

Ten-year species targets
Summary tables of animal and plant species targets are below. For full details, see Table 26 and Table 27.
Table 1 Ten-year targets for animal species
Species                                      Common name                      Target
Advena campbellii                            Campbell's keeled glass-snail    Maintain at least three viable populations on Norfolk Island
Mathewsoconcha grayi (Advena grayi)          Gray's glass-snail               At least one large stable population on Phillip Island
Mathewsoconcha phillipii (Advena phillipii)  Phillip Island glass-snail       n/a, presumed extinct
Mathewsoconcha suteri (Advena suteri)        Suter's striped glass-snail      Maintain at least two viable populations on Norfolk Island
Quintalia stoddartii (Advena stoddartii)     Stoddart's glass-snail           n/a, presumed extinct
Christinus guentheri                         Lord Howe Island gecko           Maintain numbers and range
Oligosoma lichenigerum                       Lord Howe Island skink           Area of occupancy increased by at least 10%
Cyanoramphus cookii                          Norfolk Island green parrot      The