Andrew Yandell Habitat Reserve
This 6 hectare reserve includes 5 hectares of pre-European remnant bushland. It is managed by the Banyule Bushland Management Unit, and with assistance from local volunteers. If you are interested in helping out, join the Friends of Andrew Yandell Habitat.
It has a concrete path and stairs running down the western side of the reserve, and is segmented by some older paths, goat tracks, fire breaks and protective fencing.
The eastern side of Yandell’s is home to Yandell’s Kindergaten, Greenhill’s Preschool, Greenhill’s Neighbourhood House and Greenhill’s Scouts.
Dogs and cats are prohibited from entering environmentally sensitive park and reserve areas as designated by signs. Dogs must be under the effective control with a chain, cord or leash outside currently fenced areas.
History
Andrew Yandell was an active member of the Greenhills community, and a founding member of the Greenhills and North Greensborough Progress Association, formed in 1945. As the area urbanised, the group could see that Greenhills was losing its natural character. Yandell requested Heidelberg City Council to purchase and preserve the 15 acres.
Video
Flora and fauna
The reserve contains remnants of vulnerable and endangered vegetation communities such as box ironbark forest, herb-rich foothill forest and valley grassy forest. The area of herb-rich foothill forest is the only stand known in Banyule while remnants of box ironbark forest are also very rare.
Yandell’s contains 206 species of indigenous plants, eight of which are listed as rare or threatened in Victoria. You can find many wildflowers such as chocolate lilies, twining fringe-lilies, yellow rush-lilies, and a range of greenhood orchids throughout.
104 fauna species have been recorded in the reserve since the late 1980s, of which 84 are indigenous. Andrew Yandell Habitat Reserve is one of only two reserves within Banyule that supports the endangered Eltham copper butterfly, a species restricted to a small number of sites in southern Victoria.
The Eltham copper butterfly has an interesting symbiotic relationship with a species of Notoncus ant and the sweet bursaria. Adult butterflies lay their eggs on the stems of the sweet bursaria and, when the larvae emerge, the ants protect them from predators by escorting them to and from the ant nests found underground at the base of the shrub. The caterpillars feed only at night on the leaves of the sweet bursaria and are usually found with the busy activity of the ants scurrying all over and around them as they are feeding on the sugary secretions of the Eltham copper butterfly larvae.
Following the caterpillars’ metamorphosis, adult Eltham copper butterflies can be seen fluttering through the reserve over summer.
Fauna
Common name |
Scientific name |
Australian magpie
|
Cracticus tibicen
|
Brown goshawk
|
Accipiter fasciatus
|
Brushtail possum
|
Trichosurus vulpecula |
Common ringtail possum
|
Pseudocheirus peregrinus
|
Eastern blue tongue lizard
|
Tiliqua scincoides
|
Eltham copper butterfly
|
Paralucia pyrodiscus lucida
|
Gang gang cockatoo
|
Callocephalon fimbriatum
|
King parrot |
Alisterus scapularis |
Laughing kookaburra
|
Dacelo novaeguineae
|
Rainbow lorikeet
|
Trichoglossus moluccanus
|
Short-beaked echidna
|
Tachyglossus aculeatus
|
Sugar glider
|
Petaurus breviceps
|
Tawny frogmouth
|
Podargus strigoides
|
Tiger snake
|
Notechis scutatus
|
Flora
Scientific name |
Common name |
Acacia acinacea
|
Gold dust wattle
|
Acacia genistifolia
|
Spreading wattle
|
Acrotriche serrulata
|
Honey pots
|
Arthropodium strictum
|
Chocolate lily
|
Bulbine bulbosa
|
Bulbine lily
|
Bursaria spinosa
|
Sweet bursaria
|
Caladenia parva
|
Green-comb spider orchid
|
Comesperma volubile
|
Love creeper
|
Daviesia leptophylla
|
Narrow-leaf bitter pea
|
Dianella revoluta
|
Spreading flax lily
|
Dianella amoena
|
Matted flax lily
|
Dichondra repens
|
Kidney weed
|
Eucalyptus melliodora
|
Yellow box
|
Goodenia ovata
|
Hop goodenia
|
Kennedia prostrata
|
Running postman
|
Pterostylis nutans
|
Nodding greenhood
|
Pultenea pedunculata
|
Matted bush pea
|
Wurmbea dioica
|
Early nancy
|
Location
37 St Helena Road, Greensborough 3088 View Map
-37.6995381,145.1128207
37 St Helena Road ,
Greensborough 3088
37 St Helena Road ,
Greensborough 3088
Andrew Yandell Habitat Reserve