Chain Wire Fencing for Plant Conservation Zones is purpose-engineered to provide non-invasive yet highly effective protection for fragile and endangered vegetation plots. With customizable mesh sizes and terrain-adaptable features, it is ideal for national parks, botanical gardens, reforestation projects, and biodiversity corridors. The fencing system blends into natural surroundings while establishing a strong ecological barrier against trampling, grazing, or intrusion.
✅ Product Description
This specialized conservation-grade chain wire fencing is designed to secure native plant zones in both wild and managed environments. Featuring galvanized or PVC-coated steel mesh, it resists corrosion and integrates seamlessly with ecological monitoring setups. Whether installed in arid deserts, shaded alpine plots, coastal dunes, or urban restoration corridors, this fencing prevents unauthorized access while maintaining airflow and light transmission essential for native flora.
Multiple global conservation projects—from the shola forests of India to France’s coastal dune belts—have adopted this system for effective, low-maintenance plant protection. It supports educational overlays such as QR signage, camera monitoring, and research plot management, and it complies with IUCN, ISO, ASTM, and ASCE ecological and structural standards.
✅ Technical Attributes
| Attribute | Specification |
|---|
| Mesh Material | Galvanized steel or powder-coated steel wire |
| Wire Diameter | 2.5mm (standard), 3.15mm (for high-strength zones) |
| Mesh Aperture | 50mm x 50mm standard; 25mm x 25mm for small mammal exclusion |
| Fence Height | 1.5m – 2.4m (adjustable by threat profile) |
| Post Type | Galvanized steel or hardwood (AS/NZS 1604 treated), 2m–2.5m spacing |
| Base Options | 300mm buried apron mesh or gravel skirt for burrow resistance |
| Coating Options | PVC-coated in green/black for low visual impact, UV stabilized |
| Add-ons | Gates with fauna gaps, signage holders, solar lighting, camera mounts |
| Certifications | ASTM F537, ISO 20899, IUCN Protected Area Guidelines, ASCE Ecological Codes |