Geelong Field Naturalists Club

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Geelong Field Naturalists Club (GFNC) is an Australian regional amateur scientific natural history and conservation society which was founded in 1961 by Trevor Pescott. It is based in Geelong, Victoria, with the aims of:

  • preserving and protecting native flora and fauna
  • promoting the conservation of natural resources and the protection of endangered species and habitats, and
  • recording information and knowledge about the flora and fauna of the Geelong region

The GFNC, with its president at the time, Jack Wheeler, was instrumental in the early 1960s in establishing the Ocean Grove Nature Reserve.[1] The logo of the club features the small ant-blue butterfly, an endangered myrmecophilous species that used to be found in the reserve.

Publications[]

The GFNC publishes a monthly magazine, the Geelong Naturalist, as well as the annual Geelong Bird Report. It also publishes books on the natural history of the Geelong region.

References[]

  1. ^ Hart, Brian; McCarthy, Gordon; Lingham, Barry; Mackenzie, Rob; Hewish, Marilyn. (2005). "The birds of Ocean Grove Nature Reserve". Geelong Bird Report 2004: 71–101. ISSN 1323-2681.

Further reading[]

  • Daly, Charles; Pescott, Edward Edgar; Hill, Mrs E.E.; Hope, G.B.; & Deller, Ernest G. (1945). The History of the Geelong Field Naturalists' Club, 1880-1932: excerpts and letters.

External links[]


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