Environmental Stewardship Since 2009
We work alongside communities, developers, and governments to protect Australia's unique ecosystems while enabling sustainable growth. Every project we undertake leaves the land better than we found it.
Fifteen years ago, a small team of biologists gathered around a campfire in the Daintree. The conversation that night shaped everything we do today. We asked ourselves: what if environmental assessment could be more than a compliance checkbox?
That question led us to develop methodologies that go beyond minimum requirements. Our assessments don't just identify what lives on a site—they reveal connections, migration patterns, and seasonal behaviours that standard surveys miss entirely.
When a mining company approached us about a proposed expansion in Western Australia, they expected the usual: species lists, impact matrices, and a report that would gather dust. Instead, we spent three months embedding with local Indigenous rangers, mapping underground water systems, and tracking the movements of a previously unknown population of greater bilbies.
Let's discuss how we can support your next project.
Each engagement is tailored to your specific context. We don't believe in one-size-fits-all solutions—Australia's landscapes are too diverse for that approach.
Comprehensive evaluations for development proposals, including flora and fauna surveys, habitat mapping, and offset calculations that satisfy regulatory requirements.
Targeted monitoring programs for threatened species, using camera traps, acoustic sensors, and field observation to establish baseline populations and track changes over time.
Multi-year revegetation strategies that bring degraded land back to ecological function. We source local provenance seeds and work with volunteer networks for ongoing maintenance.
Independent verification that your operations meet permit conditions. We identify gaps before regulators do and help you develop practical remediation strategies.
Most environmental consultants spend their days in offices, reviewing satellite imagery and desktop databases. That's useful work, but it misses something essential: the lived texture of a landscape.
Our senior ecologists average 180 field days per year. We wade through creeks at dawn counting platypus burrows. We sit motionless in hides waiting for cassowaries to cross established corridors. We dig through leaf litter to find the orchids that only bloom for three weeks each spring.
When we commissioned glade-ocelot for our solar farm assessment, we expected pushback and delays. Instead, they found a corridor design that actually improved connectivity for local wildlife. The project got approved faster because regulators trusted their methodology.
This hands-on approach costs more upfront. It takes longer than desktop studies. But time and again, it reveals insights that change project outcomes—sometimes saving clients millions in avoided redesigns or offset purchases.
Tell us about your site and objectives. We'll respond within two business days with initial thoughts on scope and approach.
We work alongside traditional owners, research institutions, and conservation groups to ensure our work contributes to broader ecological knowledge. Every dataset we collect feeds into public research repositories after client approval.