Taylorville Station as a protected area is referred in various sources either as "Taylorville Station" or as a "reserve."
Description
Location, size and vegetation
The reserve is located in the east of South Australia on the north side of the Murray River about to the north-west of the town of Renmark and about east of the Adelaide city centre. It is bounded to its eastern side by the Calperum Station reserve and to its north by the Gluepot Reserve. The reserve covers an area of and is "entirely vegetated by Mallee vegetation communities."
Purpose
The purpose of the reserve is the protection of "Listed Critical Habitat" for the bird species, black-eared miner, in conjunction with both the Calperum Station reserve and the Gluepot Reserve. The reserve along with the Calperum Station reserve is reported as being "important for the conservation of the nationally vulnerable malleefowl, the regionally vulnerable bush stone-curlew and the nationally vulnerable southern bell frog." The reserve is also reported as being one of the "key components of the Riverland Biosphere Reserve."
History
The pastoral leases for the land were purchased in 2000 by Australian Landscape Trust Association Incorporated using funds obtained both from its own sources and those granted by the Australian Government. The leases were subsequently transferred by deed of assignment to the Director of National Parks to hold in trust with ALT and the Director of National Parks entering into an agreement for ALT to manage the land. During the financial year 2013-14, the pastoral leases along with those for the Calperum Station reserve were transferred to Austland Services Pty Ltd which is a company owned by ALT and who "will continue to manage the properties in accordance with the trust arrangements."
Management
As of 2014, the reserve and the Calperum Station reserve was managed as one unit by Austland Services Pty Ltd. The management agreement with the Director of National Parks includes at least three principal requirements. Firstly, Taylorville Station is to be used for "conservation and protection of mallee and other vegetation associations on the land, along with their dependent wildlife." Secondly, the reserve is to be used for "public education as a model for the implementation of the UNESCOMan and the Biosphere Programme directed to the maintenance of regional biodiversity." Thirdly, the reserve is to be managed as a Category IV protected area consistent with the requirements of the regulations to the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999.