Native Plants Queensland - Cairns

Native Plants Queensland - Cairns To share stories, plant information and excursion details.

If you are interested in learning more about Australian plants, in growing Australian plants suitable for your home garden or local community project, and at the same time, assisting in the Conservation, Cultivation and Education about Australian Native Plants, we welcome you to join the Society for Growing Australina Plants or attend one of our meetings as a visitor.

16/06/2026

Persoonia pinifolia/Pine-leaved Geebung
Pine-leaved Geebung (Persoonia pinifolia) is one of the most architectural of the geebungs - its long, pine-like needle foliage providing a feathery soft texture while the pendulous clusters of bright green drupes add year-round visual interest. A NSW endemic of the Sydney Basin sandstone, it's a favourite food plant for native wildlife including the Eastern Spinebill. Remarkably drought-tolerant once established, it thrives in sandy, acid soils in full sun and is one of the more reliable geebungs for cultivation.
📷 Alan Fairley

https://apple.news/ABT_XDivyT1u4deITNxKADQ
01/06/2026

https://apple.news/ABT_XDivyT1u4deITNxKADQ

Almost two dozen decades-old palm trees, of a species rarely spotted across Australia, are currently flowering in Darwin for the first — and only — time.

28/05/2026

A beetle no bigger than a sesame seed is already devastating Perth’s urban forest – and it should terrify the rest of Australia.

The tiny invasive beetle tunnels into trees and spreads a deadly fungus that can starve them from the inside out. Thousands of trees have already been removed in WA, and experts warn huge parts of Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane could be vulnerable next.

Our Citizen Science Coordinator Jess Ward-Jones penned this opinion piece in The Point highlighting one of the most powerful tools we have to fight back: citizen science. 🔍

Full text:

Imagine Moreton Bay and Port Jackson figs, Illawarra flames and wattles dead and dying across Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane.
Imagine paperbark swamps devastated and the
sheoaks on the banks of rivers being wiped out. Imagine what this will mean for the wildlife that depend on these keystone species.

This could be the future if the polyphagous shot-hole borer escapes Western Australia.

This tiny invasive beetle – no bigger than a sesame seed – has already devastated parts of Perth’s urban forest. Thousands of trees have been removed, eradication efforts have failed, and now new research suggests Sydney could be dangerously vulnerable.

The modelling, released recently, found almost half of Sydney’s urban trees are moderately to extremely susceptible to the beetle and the fungal disease it spreads. The consequences would be enormous.

These trees cool our suburbs during summer heat, provide habitat for birds, bugs, and other wildlife, shape the identity of neighbourhoods and make dense urban life more liveable. Lose them, and Sydney becomes hotter, harsher and far less beautiful.

When it comes to invasive species, people are both the problem and the solution.

Human movement is how pests, like the shot-hole borer, move between states and suburbs – carried unknowingly in things like firewood, pot plants or green waste. But people are also our great biosecurity asset.

A parent noticing strange holes in a fig tree near a playground. A retiree photographing insects in their backyard. A walker noticing dead branches on street trees.
Some of the most significant early detections of invasive species in Australia came from regular, curious citizens or ‘citizen scientists.’
Governments cannot inspect every tree in every park, street and backyard across a city this large. Early detection depends on people paying attention to the places they love. And in this case, timing matters enormously.

The shot-hole borer carries a fungus that it farms inside trees to feed its young. In some trees, this fungus spreads and blocks the tree’s vascular system until it declines and dies. In Perth, the infestation became so widespread that more than 4000 trees were removed before authorities eventually decided that eradication was no longer feasible.
Australia now stands at a critical moment when preparedness could mean the difference between prevention and irreversible loss.

Governments need to urgently invest in surveillance, monitoring and public awareness before this beetle arrives.

That is why citizen science is becoming one of the most important environmental tools we have. Apps like iNaturalist and projects like the Invasive Species Council’s Bug Hunt are turning ordinary Australians into frontline defenders for nature – helping scientists track invasive species, monitor native wildlife and spot threats before they spiral out of control. And the best part is, anyone can do it.

You do not need a science degree. You just need curiosity. Photographing strange holes in a backyard tree. How about logging unusual-looking noodles protruding from a trunk. Noticing a sick fig tree at a local playground. These small observations can become early warning systems that help protect entire cities.

Because the person is our best chance of stopping this beetle may not be wearing a uniform or sitting in Parliament.

They may simply be someone who stopped to look at a tree.

26/05/2026

🌴 A comprehensive evolutionary family tree covering roughly 86% of all known cycad species has been constructed using massive genomic datasets.

🧬 The evolutionary history and relationships across all ten surviving genera have been firmly confirmed through this new framework, which can be accessed here: doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.275.194283

Montgomery Botanical Center Western Sydney U - Hawkesbury Institute for the Environment Senckenberg

20/05/2026

The Western Australian wildflower season from August to October produces the largest temperate wildflower display in the world, with over 12,000 species of flowering plants covering hundreds of thousands of square kilometres of bush from Geraldton to Esperance.

The Coalseam Conservation Park near Dongara and the Everlastings fields near Mullewa are among the finest accessible displays.

The wildflower season varies year to year depending on winter rainfall.

Those who drive the Brand Highway inland route in late August in a good year and find the roadsides and paddocks carpeted in everlastings, grevilleas, and banksias as far as the eye can see describe it as one of the most visually extraordinary free natural experiences available anywhere in Australia.

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Cairns, QLD
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