Clean Up Month is in full swing with many community groups removing litter from our catchment through Clean Up Month to help make our environment a cleaner space for all, including the wildlife we all love!

Occurring annually during March, local community groups from all over the Peel-Harvey Catchment come together to help clean up our land and waterways in a collective effort termed ‘Clean Up Month’.

The Peel-Harvey Catchment is home to wetlands of international importance recognised through the global Ramsar convention. Our Ramsar Site 482 includes the Bindjareb Djilba (Peel Inlet, Harvey Estuary) and the freshwater lakes, Lake Mealup, Lake McLarty and the super-salty Yalgorup Lakes. This means that we not only have a responsibility to our local wildlife but also to the international community to protect this unique system of wetlands from threats such as litter.

Litter that enters our waterways is one of the main factors that can harm the species of wildlife that reside in them, causing injury or even death through ingestion and entanglement of materials such as the most common form of waste, plastic. It is important that we protect these waterways and surrounds that provide habitat for many amazing species from our estuary’s approximately 80 resident Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphins to thousands of migratory shorebirds, making sure to keep our environment a clean, safe habitat for all the local wildlife.

Last year 366 volunteers worked together across 17 events to clean up around the coastal plain catchment of the Peel-Harvey Estuary. The teams collected an impressive 1.9 tonnes (1,900 kilograms) of litter and debris, mostly from or near to rivers and wetland areas. Now in its seventh year running, we are looking to make this year’s efforts even bigger and better.

PHCC is pleased to support Friends of Rivers Peel, Mandurah Environment and Heritage Group and our community to Clean Up this March.

This project is supported by the PHCC through funding from the Australian Government’s National Landcare Program

We acknowledge the Noongar people as Traditional Custodians of this land and pay our respects to all Elders past and present