Face-to-face with Ningaloo’s living miracles
Face-to-face with Ningaloo’s living miracles
“Places like Exmouth Gulf are vanishingly precious. They help keep our natural estate and our world heritage assets alive. They challenge and feed our scientific knowledge. And they help keep ordinary citizens sane. So, this development is an awful prospect, a disaster in the making.” See Tim Winton’s story in The Guardian and The Observer.
MORE LATEST NEWS & EVENTS
Subsea 7 taps EPA for Exmouth Gulf Concessions
Subsea 7 now says there’ll be far more seabed disturbance and even more land clearing than previously admitted. Seabed disturbance from towing massive pipes through Ningaloo’s Nursery has now been revised upwards by 1464 hectares and onshore construction...
Gulf shores included in new parks plans
The WA government has announced ambitious new additions to the state’s conservation estate, including the former Giralia station and lands on the eastern side of Exmouth Gulf. An encouraging first step on the road to giving Ningaloo’s Nursery the...
Vessels pose risk to whales in Exmouth Gulf
To avoid predators, mother and baby humpbacks communicate in 'whispers'. But Prof Lars Bejder suggests more large vessels and increased noise in Ningaloo’s nursery will ‘mask’ humpback whale communication. That means mothers won’t hear their calves, and...
Prime humpback whale nursery could become site of conflict: study
Recent research suggests that Ningaloo's whales will be at risk from industrialisation. "The recovering population cannot afford to have this habitat damaged or degraded," said our campaigner, Jeremy Tager in The Australian, "It’s a timely reminder that...
Planned development projects in Exmouth Gulf pose risk to humpback whales
Professor Lars Bejder and his colleagues have just published a study in Scientific Reports that shows how vulnerable Ningaloo's whales are to boat strike, noise stress and communication breakdown associated with industrial disturbance. This highlights the...
Mangroves are crucial. But they’re disappearing.
They might be considered “the armpits of the oceans”, but mangroves, salt marshes and seagrass are crucial in the fight against climate change. Watch this report on ABC’s 7.30 featuring the inspiring Dr Peter Macreadie and Protect Ningaloo science...





