Monday, April 6, 2015

Mossman Gorge


Mossman Gorge is located in the southern part of Daintree National Park, 80 kilometres [50 mi] north of the regional town of Cairns and about five kilometres from the cane-farming town of Mossman. It is a component of the traditional homeland of the indigenous Eastern Kuku Yalanji people. A suspension bridge runs across Rex Creek proximate to where it enters the Mossman River, linking the carpark area to a 2.4-kilometre rainforest loop track walk.
Mossman Gorge was declared a component of Daintree National Park in 1967,
Fauna commonly observed in the gorge includes the Australian brushturkey, Orange-footed scrubfowl, the brilliant metallic-blue Ulysses butterfly and the Boyd's forest dragon. More than 430 species of birds have been spotted in the gorge, along with 18 species of reptiles, 12 species of amphibians and several species of fishes. Seasonally, the Buff-breasted Paradise Kingfisher visits, nests and breeds.
                                             Gala Auction of Amazing Experiences
                                                Mossman Gorge, Queensland
More than five hundred different species of Australian native plants grow in the lowland tropical rainforests in the gorge area, including a wide diversity of species of trees, shrubs, vines, epiphytes and ferns. Some species abundant along the public ambulating tracks, often descried and photographed by tourists, are as follows. The effulgent orange seasonally fruiting, minuscule shrubs of chain fruits Alyxia ruscifolia and pilar red pittosporum Pittosporum rubiginosum occur commonly along the tracks. Many vine species grow up to the canopy, including the prominent and conspicuous wait-a-while or rattan palm, 


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