Mooball National Park

Mooball National Park is a national park located in New South Wales, Australia, 648 km northeast of Sydney. It is nearby to the town of Mooball and is 10 kilmetres south-east of Murwillumbah. It is on the traditional lands of the Bundjalung people.

It was established in January 1999 and covers an area of 1160 hectares and before this time it was managed by Forests NSW as the Mooball State Forest.

It is one of the largest lowland rainforests in Australia, and is a refuge for several animal species, where it sits in the predominantly clear Tweed and Brunswick Valleys.

Native flora and fauna
The park is home to a variety of native plants and within it theirs are at least 17 vulnerable or endangered plats. The endangered plant species present include:


 * Cassia brewsteri var. marksiana (Brush cassia)

The park also supports a number of threatened species including vulnerable mammals.
 * Dendrocnide moroides (Gympie stinger)
 * Drynaria rigidula (Basket ferm)
 * Elaeocarpus williamsianus (Hairy quandong)
 * Endiandra floydii (Crystal Creek walmut)
 * Endiandra muelleri subsp. bracteata (Green-leaved rose walnut)
 * Tarenna cameronii (Cameron’s Tarenna).