Skip to content
Animal Animal WelfareRights, Environment

Australian Koala Foundation Bids Farewell to Dr. Dave Mitchell – Champion of Koala Conservation

Australian Koala Foundation 3 mins read

The Australian Koala Foundation (AKF) today announced the retirement of Dr. Dave Mitchell, Landscape Ecologist who will officially step down on 11 September 2025 after nearly three decades of extraordinary dedication to Koala conservation.

Dr. Mitchell has been central to AKF’s research, most notably through his work on the Koala Habitat Atlas (KHA), which maps Koala habitat across the Koalas’ entire geographic range. His recent PhD thesis validated the KHA methodology, reinforcing its importance as a critical tool in understanding and protecting wild Koala populations and should be a vital tool for a Koala Recovery Plan.

Deborah Tabart OAM, Chair of the Australian Koala Foundation, said Dave will leave an incredible legacy.

“Not only has he contributed to the mapping of habitat across the Koala’s entire geographic range using the Koala Habitat Atlas (KHA), but he has also validated the KHA methodology in his recent PhD Thesis. Ever the scientist, Dave has said, ‘What I love about the KHA is that you don’t have to be a scientist to understand it — even politicians can,’” said Ms Tabart.

According to Ms Tabart, Dr. Mitchell’s work on both the KHA and Koala population estimates has provided the most reliable data available today.

“I am going to take this opportunity when Dave retires (if anyone can really retire from Koalas) to say categorically that the Koala Habitat Atlas maps are what is needed for the recovery of the species, and our Koala numbers, which Dave has revised over 20 years, are as accurate as anyone can possibly determine,” said Ms Tabart.

“I am now going to put a line in the sand on the Koala Numbers for the time being and will take the view that if anyone does not believe our numbers are correct, they will need to provide good science to refute them, not just cursory media comments that diminish the work of Dr. Mitchell and his scientific colleagues.”

“With projections of extinctions of 2050 (long after our politicians have retired) and with the CSIRO project ending in 2032, I have taken the view that I am tired of having to prove we are right, now it is time for any critic to prove they are right and NOW.”

“Time is of the essence. What is encouraging is that I do think that the Koala community are starting to see that our political leaders are using cunning and deceptive announcements or inducements to make it look like Koala habitats are protected, but they are not. All we see are piecemeal efforts that do nothing to address the decline of Koala populations in other areas.”

Dr. Mitchell’s meticulous approach has included reviewing every published scientific paper on Koalas with a particular focus on carrying capacity and home ranges, ensuring AKF’s work remains grounded in both rigorous research and practical conservation outcomes.

“On behalf of our Board and supporters, I want to thank Dave for his incredible dedication,” said Ms Tabart. “His thirst for knowledge about Koalas and how they live in their habitats is a result of great enthusiasm and for reading just about every single paper published about Koalas. It has been a stellar career and Dave stands by this work. So do we. While critics continue to question AKF’s Koala numbers, we welcome anyone with solid science to get in touch - AKF will always accept good science and would love to see good reasons to increase our population estimates. It is now time for our Environment Minister, Minister Murray Watt, to focus on habitat protection; the reality is that habitats are being lost forever and protecting them requires stronger legal safeguards via a Koala Protection Act. That is our “Line in the Sand” right now.

END


About us:

About the Australian Koala Foundation

The Australian Koala Foundation (AKF) is the principal non-profit, non-government organisation dedicated to the effective management and conservation of the Koala and its habitat. Our proudest achievement is the recent finalisation of mapping the entire geographic range of the Koala, via our Koala Habitat Atlas mapping methodology. The AKF is also dedicated to a Koala Protection Act.


Contact details:

To speak with Dr. Dave Mitchell or the Chair, Deborah Tabart OAM, contact:

Deborah at [email protected]

Office: (07) 3229 7233

Mobile: 0407 750 668

Media

More from this category

  • Environment, Legal
  • 16/03/2026
  • 10:12
NSW Environment Protection Authority (EPA)

FORESTRY CORPORATION OF NSW TO PAY $450,000 AFTER GIANT AND HOLLOW-BEARING TREES ILLEGALLY LOGGED

The organisation responsible for managing timber production in NSW’s state-owned native and plantation forests has been ordered to pay $450,000 in penalties after prosecution by the NSW Environment Protection Authority (EPA). Forestry Corporation of NSW (FCNSW) was convicted and sentenced over the illegal logging of six giant and three hollow-bearing trees in Wild Cattle Creek State Forest near Coffs Harbour in June and July 2020. The NSW Land and Environment Court found that the logging of these trees by FCNSW contractors caused harm to koala habitat within forest that now forms part of the footprint of the Great Koala National…

  • Contains:
  • Environment
  • 16/03/2026
  • 09:51
NSW Environment Protection Authority (EPA)

NSW’S MOST CONTAMINATED WATERWAYS REVEALED IN LANDMARK MICROPLASTIC REPORT

Link to vision, grabs and images: https://bit.ly/4b6mZo0 An Australian-first microplastic assessment has found the Cooks River, Dee Why Lagoon, Muddy Creek and upper Parramatta River are NSW’s most contaminated coastal waterways. The NSW Environment Protection Authority (EPA) has partnered with the NSW Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water (DCCEEW) to deliver the Broadscale Microplastic Assessment. The report ranks coastal waterways by microplastic concentration in the top 15 centimetres of surface water, from most to least contaminated. The three-year comprehensive study will help environment authorities understand how microplastics end up in waterways and where to focus further research.…

  • Contains:
  • Animal Animal WelfareRights, Political
  • 16/03/2026
  • 07:00
Australian Koala Foundation

Call continues for Koala Protection Act (KPA)

The Australian Koala Foundation (AKF) is still fighting for a national KoalaProtection Act (KPA), grounded in a simple principle: the rule of law mustprotect…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.