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David Fleay Wildlife Park information


David Fleay Wildlife Park
Lumholtz's tree kangaroo at David Fleay Wildlife Park
LocationFleays Wildlife Park Conservation Park, Tallebudgera Creek Road, Tallebudgera, Queensland, Australia
Coordinates28°06′28″S 153°26′37″E / 28.1078°S 153.4437°E / -28.1078; 153.4437 (David Fleay Wildlife Park)
Design period1940s–1960s (post-World War II)
Built1952–1983
Websitehttps://www.qld.gov.au/davidfleay
Queensland Heritage Register
Official nameDavid Fleay Wildlife Park, Fleays Wildlife Park
Typestate heritage (built)
Designated23 February 2001
Reference no.601389
Significant period1950s-1983 (fabric)
Significant componentsanimal enclosure/s, steps/stairway, car park, pathway/walkway, signage – interpretative, residential accommodation – main house, kiosk
David Fleay Wildlife Park is located in Queensland
David Fleay Wildlife Park
Location of David Fleay Wildlife Park in Queensland
David Fleay Wildlife Park is located in Australia
David Fleay Wildlife Park
David Fleay Wildlife Park (Australia)

David Fleay Wildlife Park is a heritage-listed wildlife park at Fleays Wildlife Park Conservation Park, Tallebudgera Creek Road, Tallebudgera, Queensland, Australia. It was built from 1952 to 1983. It is also known as Fleays Wildlife Park. It was added to the Queensland Heritage Register on 23 February 2001.[1]

Established by Australian naturalist David Fleay in 1952, the Park today is home to many native animals, which are displayed in surroundings similar to their natural habitats. Managed by the Environmental Protection Agency, the Park aims to raise community awareness about the need to protect native animals, especially rare and threatened species. The Park has a long tradition of breeding native animals and also includes an animal hospital for sick, injured and orphaned animals.

After investigating areas around Brisbane and South East Queensland, Fleay selected the Tallebudgera Estuary as a suitable site for a fauna reserve in late 1951. He acquired land there for a reserve in 1952, and added further parcels of land to the reserve in 1958 and 1965. Fleay's Fauna Reserve, as it was originally known, was established as a place of scientific research and education. Animals such as southern cassowaries, dingoes, platypuses, owls, crocodiles and pythons lived at the sanctuary in "benevolent captivity", whilst bandicoots, flying foxes, the endangered eastern bristlebirds, white-breasted sea eagles, wallabies and koalas were free to come and go as they pleased. The Nocturnal house provides visitors the opportunity to view nocturnal animals such as the fat-tailed dunnart, southern greater glider, bilby and mahogany sugar glider.[2]

In order to ensure the future survival of the sanctuary, David and Sigrid Fleay sold a large portion of the reserve (37 acres (15 ha)) to the Queensland Government in 1982, which became a Conservation Park. The main area of the Fauna Reserve housing the animals (20 acres (8.1 ha)) was also sold to the Government the following year. The remainder of the site (7.5 acres (3.0 ha)) was transferred to the Government in 1985. David and Sigrid Fleay continued to live at Fleay's Wildlife Park following the transfer of ownership, where David continued his research and kept animals, such as kangaroos, emus, cassowaries and his Galápagos tortoise, Harriet, largely in their original enclosures. The Park closed in 1983 for redevelopment, re-opening in 1988. David Fleay died on 7 August 1993. In October 1995, 7.4488 hectares (18.406 acres) of the site was gazetted as Fleay's Wildlife Park Conservation Park under the Nature Conservation Act 1992 (Qld) and today is operated by the Queensland Parks and Wildlife Service for the people of Queensland.[2] The Park was renamed David Fleay Wildlife Park in 1997, in tribute to its founder.

  1. ^ "David Fleay Wildlife Park (entry 601389)". Queensland Heritage Register. Queensland Heritage Council. Retrieved 1 August 2014.
  2. ^ a b "Nocturnal house". Department of Environment and Resource Management. 15 June 2011. Archived from the original on 14 January 2012. Retrieved 17 December 2011.

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