creating a native vegetation insectarium · step 3: click on the yellow folder and turn on the 2005...

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CREATING A NATIVE VEGETATION INSECTARIUM

Putting research into practice with an on-farm trial site

This project is supported by the PPWCMA, through funding

from the Australian Government’s National Landcare Programme

The multiple benefits of having native vegetation on your farm

• Shelterbelt• Habitat and food source for insects- (insectariums, beetle

banks, insect corridors)• Biodiversity values (consider offsets in planning applications)• Meet obligations in Environmental Assurance programs• Bush Food production- income diversification

1. Biodiversity Interactive Map: Look up the relevant Ecological Vegetation Class (EVC) for your property

Weblink: http://mapshare2.dse.vic.gov.au/MapShare2EXT/imf.jsp?site=bim

Step 2: Zoom in to the area you are looking at. I select a

scale of 1:10,000 or 1:20,000 depending on how much

information is needed.Step 3: Click on the yellow folder and turn on the 2005

EVC layer. Then refresh the map.

Click on legend to bring up the map key for each EVC

Click on the pdf icon and fill out the details. Click OK. A hyperlink with open map will appear. Click on the link

http://www.depi.vic.gov.au/environment-and-wildlife/biodiversity/evc-benchmarks#bioregionname

From this web link, you can scroll down past the bioregion map to a table which lists each of these bioregions and hyperlinks to their EVC benchmark. Below is the Highlands-Southern Fall as Yellingbo is in this bioregion.

Open the word or pdf file.

Look up the relevant EVC numbers listed in your property EVC Map.

http://www.mapimage.net/IntraMaps75/ApplicationEngine/Application.aspx?project=Yarra+Ranges&configId=bf9bd338-12aa-43f2-95aa-a491de0b3a8d

Type in an address then click on the Indigenous Vegetation Community List to obtain EVC plant lists specific to that address!

Look for plants which you have seen featured in the research as appropriate insectarium species

Quite a few relevant EVC’s have bush foods, you just need to know what you are looking for

Plant a mix of EVC plants depending on the layout of your insectarium

The more plant diversity and layers, the better the habitat for diverse beneficial insects

CUSTOMISED SITE PLANTING GUIDE

Using the EVC list you have for the property, start to highlight plants you know are highly beneficial in an insectarium:

Sweet bursaria, wallaby grass, prickly tea-tree are the three HERO plants

What else is on your list that matches your planting space/layout and will provide nectar and pollen?

Shelterbelt- Upper and Middle story flowering plantsInsectary plants- HERO plants and similar ones found in your EVC. Make sure

there is diversity in your strata layers and include groundcovers.The customised list for Fieldberberry Farm is available at:

http://www.ppwcma.vic.gov.au/news/publications/NB: this is specific to this farm and is a GUIDE only.

• Upper story (shelterbelt)- E. olida• Middle story- (shelterbelt)- Bursaria spinosa, Prostanthera lasianthos• Lower story- grevillea, Acacia, correa sp, round leaf mint bush, parrot pea, bush

pea, heath, daisy, honeypots, river mint, lilies, grasses• Groundcovers- native violet, running postman, pussytails, muntries etc

Your insectarium layout can be any design you like• Grasses under vine or inter-row, end of row strainer posts• Surrounding a dam• Land class zoned unsuitable for production• Garden beds• Headlands, buffers and re-vegetated shelterbelts

It’s about insect corridors and connectivity to native vegetation

Acacia suevolens

Heath

Mentha australis

Kunzea pomifera *

Grevillea rosmanifolia

Themeda triandra

Euc olida(strawberry gum) *

Native grassesWallaby, Weeping and Spear)

Is it working?• Spring in Victoria hasn’t been kind if you want to monitor insects!

10 sticky traps, one week (7 days) each month Sept-Jan3 pit fall traps in the main insectary planting, one week each month Sept-JanMonitoring for increases in abundance and diversity of beneficial insects over next 2 years, longer if my RLF project is re-funded!

Is it working?• Spring in Victoria hasn’t been kind if you want to monitor insects!

• However, 7 weeks after planting, some native plants were already flowering and spiders moving in to the insectary

How much did it cost?

Insectarium Costs- indicative start-up costs for any property

EXPENSE ITEM COST CALCULATION COMMENTS

native indigenous plants x380 760based on tubestock prices averaging $2 each

60m row x 2m wide, some indiegnous nurseries are cheaper, commerical nurseries more expensive

Eucalypt windbreak (optional) x 10 plants 20

based on tubestock prices averaging $2 each

some indiegnous nurseries are cheaper, commerical nurseries more expensive

tree guards x 380 342 based on .90c/tree guard and stakes

bulk buy sticky traps x90 34 optional for IPM monitoring

IPM monitoring (optional) 1500 $30/trap. Optional

monitoring Baseline September 1 week x 10 traps. Oct-Jan (4 months). 10 traps over a week x 4 weeks (one analysis/month) = 50 traps total

IPM monitoring (optional) 360 $30/pitfall trap 3 traps in main insectarium $90 each analysis x 4 months

snap lock bags & postage for sticky traps 60 approx. post to Melb Uni

Mulch 2000 50m3variable depending on product used, amount required, transport distance and hire of a spreader

TOTAL 5076

without IPM monitoring 3216

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