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Southern right whale with calf in the Great Australian Bight Marine Park. Photo by Georgina Steytler

Southern right whale with calf in the Great Australian Bight Marine Park. Photo by Georgina Steytler

New arrangements for the South-east Marine Parks Network are in effect from 13 February 2025. Visit South-east Network Management Plan for more details including zoning and allowable activities.

Freycinet Marine Park is home to an abundance of butterfly perch, newly discovered black corals, diverse colourful sponge gardens and foraging seabirds. Southern right whales rest in the marine park while migrating.

The park reaches from the continental shelf far out into the deep ocean, protecting:

  • seamounts
  • deep sea (abyssal) plains
  • canyons
  • deep granite reefs
  • all the marine life that lives in these places.

Scientists and citizen scientists are making exciting new discoveries about marine life in this vast marine park, and there’s lots more still to explore.

The marine park begins offshore from Bicheno and Freycinet National Park on the east coast of Tasmania. It covers 57,942 km², with depths from 40 metres to over 3000 metres.

It has National Park, Recreational Use and Multiple Use Zones.

Explore

The eastern end of Freycinet Marine Park is adjacent to Governor Marine Reserve, a Tasmanian marine park with great opportunities for experienced divers to explore.

Discover

Parks Australia supports research to better understand our marine parks. We love sharing the exciting findings.

Deep-diving citizen scientists explored the granite reefs, filming the diverse marine life living in the park, including black corals.

Select the park area on the map below to see what you can do in the Freycinet Marine Park.

Network

South-east marine parks

Park area

57,942 km2

Depth range

40 to 3,000m

Average depth

4,206m