Kara Moana Healey
Kara Moana Healey (23 June 1904 – 10 June 2006) was a field collector, conservationist, preservationist and naturalist and the first female National Park Ranger in Victoria, Australia. She was born Kara Moana Elizabeth Vernon in Kawhia, New Zealand. Her parents, William John Vernon and Mary Vernon née Dunstone, were from Australia and in 1906 the family returned to Australia and settled in Mysia, north west of Bendigo. Early lifeAfter finishing high school she became a teacher's assistant at Stuart Mill State School near St Arnaud, Victoria until she met and married William Stanley McGreevy (known as Stan) in 1925. They divorced in 1946. In 1948 she married Jim Healey, the caretaker at Tarra Valley National Park; he died in 1952. Tarra-Bulga National ParkHealey was appointed the Park Ranger at Tarra-Bulga National Park[1] where she collected specimens for identification for the National Herbarium for ten years. By 1961 she had collected over 160 specimens. Two new types of fungi were named after her: Poria healeyi,[2] a previously unidentified fungus causing yellow straw rot in Mountain Ash, and Lambertella healeyi, a fungus growing on another fungus. She collected a total of over 500 specimens including animals and 80 species of moss.[3][4] Scientific contributionNeville Walters,[5][6] a scientist at the CSIRO,[clarification needed] described Healey's contributions as "easily the best" of the 150 or more collectors Australia wide, and said "She knew every lyrebird in the park as well as many of the pilot birds, Crimson Rosellas and yellow robins."[7] Healey also contributed specimens to the National Museum of Victoria, the University of Melbourne and the National Herbarium. Retirement and life final stagesIn 1963, Healey married Tom McKean, a widower; he died in 1986. In 1995 she became a resident of the Heytesbury Lodge nursing home at Cobden. She was awarded a certificate of merit for outstanding support by the Save the Children Australia. Her 100th birthday,[8] at Timboon was attended by over 100 friends and family. She died 13 days before her 102nd birthday.[9][10][11][12] Commemoration at the centenary of Tarra-Bulga National ParkIn 2007 a special ceremony was held at Tarra Valley Park, now part of Tarra-Bulga National Park, as part of the centennial celebrations, to unveil a special tribute to the first woman park ranger and the contribution she made to the understanding of the ecology of the valley known as Tarra Valley.[13][14] Notes
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