Biodiversity and Vegetation - Australia
Australia
Proportion of native vegetation remaining in Australia
At the continental scale, the real differences in patterns of clearing between major vegetation groups are not clear. This is partly because the largest proportion of Australia, the rangelands, remains relatively free of broad-scale clearing.
The key emerging picture at the Australia-wide scale is that the most affected vegetation groups, where approximately 50% of the pre-European extent now remains, are the low closed forests and closed shrublands and the heaths. These two major vegetation groups were already very restricted in their pre-European extent so that further clearing has a major impact on aerial extent.
Major vegetation groups where 60-80% of pre-European extent remains are:
- rainforest and vine thickets;
- eucalypt tall open forests;
- eucalypt open forests;
- eucalypt woodlands;
- eucalypt open woodlands; and
- mallee woodlands and shrublands.
Of these, rainforest and vine thickets and eucalypt tall open forests were very restricted in their pre-European extent.
| Major Vegetation Group | Pre-European Area (km2) | Circa 1997 Area (km2) | % remaining relative to pre-European area |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rainforest and vine thickets | 43,493 | 30,232 | 70 |
| Eucalyptus tall open forests | 44,817 | 30,129 | 67 |
| Eucalyptus open forest | 340,968 | 240,484 | 71 |
| Eucalyptus low open forest | 15,066 | 12,923 | 86 |
| Eucalyptus woodlands | 1,012,047 | 693,449 | 69 |
| Acacia forest and woodlands | 657,582 | 560,649 | 85 |
| Callitris forest and woodlands | 30,963 | 27,725 | 90 |
| Casuarina forest and woodlands | 73,356 | 60,849 | 83 |
| Melaleuca forest and woodlands | 93,501 | 90,513 | 97 |
| Other forests and woodlands | 125,328 | 119,383 | 95 |
| Eucalyptus open woodlands | 513,943 | 384,310 | 75 |
| Tropical Eucalyptus woodland/grasslands | 256,434 | 254,228 | 99 |
| Acacia open woodlands | 117,993 | 114,755 | 97 |
| Mallee woodlands and shrublands | 383,399 | 250,420 | 65 |
| Low closed forest and closed shrublands | 15,864 | 8,749 | 55 |
| Acacia shrublands | 670,737 | 654,280 | 98 |
| Other Shrublands | 115,824 | 98,948 | 85 |
| Heath | 47,158 | 25,860 | 55 |
| Tussock grasslands | 589,212 | 528,998 | 90 |
| Hummock grasslands | 1,756,962 | 1,756,104 | 100 |
| Other grasslands, herblands, sedgelands and rushlands | 100,504 | 98,522 | 98 |
| Chenopod shrub, samphire shrub and forblands | 563,389 | 552,394 | 98 |
| Mangroves, tidal mudflat, samphire and bare areas, claypan, sand, rock, salt lakes, lagoons, lakes | 112,063 | 106,999 | 95 |
Bar graph: Area (km2) of pre-European and present major vegetation groups in Australia.
Methods
This analysis is based on a comparison of the present extent of major vegetation groups (circa 1997) and pre-European mapping.
Applications
Analysis at the Australia-wide, State and Territory and regional scales provides information on which to base broad assessments of change in extent and type of vegetation. This is a key input to assessing:
- the representativeness or otherwise of Australia's nature conservation estate and for related interpretations (e.g. setting priorities for retention of native vegetation types);
- opportunities for catchment rehabilitation, whether the issue is catchment hydrology or dryland salinity control;
- the types of vegetation suitable for rehabilitation, restoration and/or revegetation activities in an area; and
- priorities for protection of biodiversity in landscapes under stress.
Limitations
Pre-European vegetation and present native vegetation for many States and Territories do not match in mapping method or scale. Development of pre-European vegetation maps in cleared areas of Australia is usually dependent upon coarse or generalised data on landforms and soils sometimes at 1:250 000 or even 1:1 000 000 scale. Reconstructing the natural complexity of vegetation patterns from such broad interpretations is difficult. Earlier vegetation mapping for areas now cleared may similarly be coarse in scale and/or generalised, with little data from systematic field sampling to support the derivation of mapping units and the allocation of individual patches of native vegetation to mapping units.
Pre-European data is more reliable where:
- impacts of European land use is minimal;
- there is good physical and floristic information (e.g. in Victoria) which can be used for detailed interpolation; and
- the scale of the pre-European mapping and method is similar to that of the current extent mapping (e.g. in Queensland, Victoria, Northern Territory and Western Australia).
Data variability is greatest in New South Wales, the Australian Capital Territory and South Australia, where the pre-European data does not meet the requirements of the National Vegetation Information System. In Tasmania the pre-European data is not finalised. In these States it is assumed that the present vegetation mapped is an approximate representation of the pre-European vegetation. The Australia wide pre-European major vegetation groups data set is an interim product.
What major vegetation groups have been cleared since European settlement in Australia?
At a continental scale, approximately 13% of the total land has been cleared. This clearing has been concentrated, reflecting settlement patterns and areas most capable of supporting development. Clearing has occurred predominantly for human settlement and agriculture in the higher rainfall regions and where there are more fertile soils, generally excluding the arid interior and tropical far north.
The condition of the vegetation varies even if the broad native vegetation fabric is still intact, condition may still be declining (discussed separately in later sections on vegetation condition).
Eucalypt open forests: about 30% of pre-European extent cleared, accounting for 10% of total clearing
Eucalypt open forests were extensively cleared in the latter half of the 19th century for:
- timber production-export (e.g. jarrah) and the local market (e.g. blackbutt); and
- agriculture and grazing (cleared or ringbarked).
Continued loss of this group would have occurred if substantial areas had not been set aside in Crown reserves for timber production and later for nature conservation. The reservations for state forests are a good example of the foresight of resource managers at the time. Other examples are the various reservations of river foreshores, tidal waters and mangrove communities in many States and Territories as crown land administration systems developed.
Eucalypt woodlands and eucalypt open woodlands: approximately 31% and 25% of pre-European extent cleared, accounting for 32% and 13% of total clearing respectively
Eucalypt woodlands and eucalypt open woodlands are an important component of cereal cropping and pastoral zones. Cleared areas are very extensive, resulting in the loss of the broad fabric of the landscape from a vegetation perspective. Within the remnants, the shrubby understorey has often been removed mechanically, by frequent fire, or by the invasion of exotic species or overgrazing of native tussock grasses (annuals often replacing perennials). Eucalypt open woodlands areas mapped as native vegetation may be highly modified.
Inland acacia forests and woodlands: approximately 15% of pre-European extent cleared, accounting for 10% of total clearing
Agricultural and pastoral development have led to major changes in extent and condition of these landscapes, expecially in brigalow (Acacia harpophylla) and mulga (A. aneura) communities. Extensive areas of brigalow, that once extended from Collinsville in Queensland to Narrabri in New South Wales, have been cleared. Approximately 4 million hectares of this brigalow was cleared as part of government land development schemes (Webb 1984). Few substantial areas remain in the southern Brigalow Belt. The government also encouraged clearing of mulga country. The expansion of grazing across the mulga lands occurred from the 1850s to the 1890s.
Mallee woodlands and shrublands: approximately 35% of pre-European extent cleared, accounting for 14% of total clearing
Encouragement for clearing was provided by government in the temperate mallee woodlands areas. Clearing was encouraged for cereal cropping and pastoralism and was often a condition of leases.
Rainforest communities: most lowland occurrences cleared, approximately 30% of pre-European extent cleared, accounting for 1% of total clearing
The broad range of rainforest and vine thicket communities across Australia found within this major vegetation group masks the level of regional depletion of some rainforest and vine thicket types.
In the coastal lowlands, floodplains and more undulating sections of the coastal ranges of eastern Australia much of the rainforest communities have been cleared. These were among the earlier native vegetation communities to be exploited for timber (using coastal rivers to gain access and transport timber out for export). Notable examples of subtropical rainforests being cleared for timber, dairy or agriculture (e.g. sugar cane or tobacco) are:
- the Big Scrub in northern New South Wales, reduced from an estimated 75 000 ha to just 300 ha by 1900 (Floyd 1987) and the Illawarra Rainforests; the Hoop Pine scrubs of south-east Queensland (Young & McDonald 1987); and
- the tropical rainforests of the Atherton and Eungella Tablelands and coastal wet tropics floodplains of the Daintree, Barron, Johnstone, Tully - Murray, Herbert, Proserpine and Pioneer rivers.
In the Brigalow Belt of Queensland and north-western New South Wales, extensive areas of vine thickets, notably the softwood scrubs, were substantially cleared for agriculture or grazing as part of Brigalow land development.
Heath communities: approximately 45% of pre-European extent cleared, accounting for 2% of total clearing
Heaths have been heavily impacted by clearing for sand mining, agriculture, grazing or development mainly in southern coastal areas. Mallee communities, which occur in association with some heath communities, have similarly had extensive areas cleared, mainly for pastoral development in Victoria and South Australia.
Tussock grasslands: approximately 10% of pre-European extent cleared, accounting for 6% of total clearing
Many of the tussock grasslands (Mitchell grass) of eastern Australia have been either substantially cleared or heavily modified from grazing. The mapping of this type reflects where there is good information on native grasslands. There are known to be many other areas either not mapped or subject to change through grazing and introduced species such as buffel grass and other introduced pasture grasses. The Audit's rangelands report discusses pasture management and condition in further detail.
| Major Vegetation Group | Cleared Area (km2) | % cleared across Australia as total of clearing |
|---|---|---|
| Rainforest and vine thickets | 13,261 | 1.3 |
| Eucalyptus tall open forests | 14,688 | 1.5 |
| Eucalyptus open forest | 100,484 | 10.2 |
| Eucalyptus low open forest | 2,143 | .2 |
| Eucalyptus woodlands | 318,598 | 32.3 |
| Acacia forest and woodlands | 96,934 | 9.8 |
| Callitris forest and woodlands | 3,238 | .3 |
| Casuarina forest and woodlands | 12,508 | 1.3 |
| Melaleuca forest and woodlands | 2,987 | .3 |
| Other forests and woodlands | 5,945 | .6 |
| Eucalyptus open woodlands | 129,633 | 13.1 |
| Tropical Eucalyptus woodland/grasslands | 2,206 | .2 |
| Acacia open woodlands | 3,239 | .3 |
| Mallee woodlands and shrublands | 133,122 | 13.5 |
| Low closed forest and closed shrublands | 7,115 | .7 |
| Acacia shrublands | 21,306 | 2.2 |
| Other Shrublands | 16,875 | 1.7 |
| Heath | 21,298 | 2.2 |
| Tussock grasslands | 60,213 | 6.1 |
| Hummock grasslands | 859 | .1 |
| Other grasslands, herblands, sedgelands and rushlands | 1,982 | .2 |
| Chenopod shrub, samphire shrub and forblands | 10,995 | 1.1 |
| Mangroves, tidal mudflat, samphire and bare areas, claypan, sand, rock, salt lakes, lagoons, lakes | 5,065 | .5 |
Note: The clearing referred to in table 2 does not include grazing, thinning or other activities. In particular, parts of the rangelands may be heavily disturbed.
Map: Cleared Major Vegetaion Groups in Australia
![]()
Source: Major vegetation groups V1.0 (1km), National Land and Water Resources Audit 2001. Data used are assumed to be correct from suppliers. © Commonwealth of Australia 2001 The summary maps provide information on Australia's native vegetation collated within the National Vegetation Information System (NVIS) at July 2001 and with additional mapped information. The NVIS will be updated as vegetation mapping becomes available. The map is a compilation of data collected at different scales by different organisations. Major Vegetation Groups were compiled by Environment Australia based on data collated by the Bureau of Rural Sciences and provided by Environment ACT, Department of Urban Services; NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service; NSW Royal Botanic Gardens; NSW State Forests; NT Department of Infrastructure, Planning and Environment; Queensland Herbarium, Environmental Protection Agency; SA Department for Environment and Heritage; Tasmanian Department of Primary Industries, Water and Environment; Flora Section, Department of Natural Resources and Environment; Agriculture Western Australia; Western Australia Department of Conservation and Land Management and Geoscience Australia, National Mapping Division. |
View a larger map of Cleared Major Vegetation Groups
Methods
This analysis is based on the present extent of native vegetation and data on the type and area of these groups cleared in Australia from the pre-European mapping. All summary findings are based on the data sets compiled for the National Vegetation Information System and development of the major vegetation groups.
Applications
This analysis at the Australia-wide, State and Territory and regional scales provides information on which to base assessment of change in land cover and type of vegetation, a key input to vegetation management activities. Loss of particular vegetation types across regions impacts on biodiversity values and landscape function and this analysis highlights those major vegetation groups.
At the regional scale, the National Vegetation Information System compilation provides an excellent basis for regional planning groups to understand the changes in vegetation extent that have occurred and set their regional priorities for vegetation management in the context of this information. The assessment of major vegetation groups across Australia provides a broader context.
Limitations
As detailed previously, issues of attributes, scale and currency of available mapping limits the precision of this analysis. The broad nature of the major vegetation groups masks the distinct vegetation types and regional clearing patterns that would emerge at a finer scale of analysis.
Which bioregions have lost most native vegetation?
The material below is an extract from the Australian Native Vegetation Assessment 2001 report. For ease of cross reference, figure, table and section references pertain to the chapter structure of this report.
Key findings
Australia has 85 designated bioregions (Environment Australia 2000). The extensive clearing of native vegetation has been concentrated in comparatively few regions. Five bioregions (some of the key agricultural zones of south-eastern and south-west Australia) (Table 13 and Figure 20) have less than 30% of native vegetation remaining:
- Victorian Midlands (Victoria);
- Victorian Volcanic Plains (Victoria and South Australia);
- Naracoorte Coastal Plain (Victoria and South Australia);
- Avon Wheatbelt (Western Australia); and
- South East Coastal Plain (Victoria).
Twenty-two bioregions have between 30% and 70% of native vegetation remaining:
- Kanmantoo;
- New South Wales South Western Slopes;
- Eyre Yorke Block;
- Nandewar;
- Swan Coastal Plain;
- New England Tableland;
- South Eastern Queensland;
- Brigalow Belt South;
- Tasmanian Northern Midlands;
- Geraldton Sandplains;
- Esperance Plains;
- Riverina;
- Brigalow Belt North;
- Mallee;
- Jarrah Forest;
- South Eastern Highlands;
- Murray Darling Depression;
- New South Wales North Coast;
- Tasmanian Northern Slopes;
- Darling Riverine Plains;
- Sydney Basin; and
- Central Mackay Coast.
Sand mining damage, Stradbroke Island, QLD
© Murray Fagg
Fifty-eight bioregions have greater than 70% of native vegetation remaining.
Detailed information on each major vegetation group cleared and the percentage of pre-European vegetation remaining for the five bioregions with less than 30% remaining native vegetation is presented in Table 14. This break-up is extremely valuable in assessing the status of each vegetation group within a region, in particular for regions where the total clearing may not be high but particular vegetation groups within the region are being targeted for clearing.
Table 13. Summary figures of clearing and remaining native vegetation for IBRA bioregions with less than 30% of native vegetation remaining.
| Victorian Midlands |
Naracoorte Coastal Plain |
South East Coastal Plain |
Avon Wheatbelt |
Victorian Volcanic Plain |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Area cleared (ha) | 2,704,748 | 1,948,364 | 1,339,960 | 8,132,108 | 1,998,844 |
| Total area of bioregion (ha) | 3,782,384 | 2,541,888 | 1,697,036 | 9,517,188 | 2,162,192 |
| Percent cleared native vegetation | 71.5 | 76.7 | 79.0 | 85.4 | 92.4 |
| Percent remaining native vegetation | 28.5 | 23.3 | 21.0 | 14.6 | 7.6 |
Figure 20. Percentage native vegetation by IBRA bioregion.
View Figure 20. Percentage native vegetation by IBRA bioregion.
Figure 21. Percentage native vegetation by IBRA subregion.
View Figure 21. Percentage native vegetation by IBRA subregion.
Table 14. Area (ha) of major vegetation groups and clearing for IBRA bioregions with <30% of native vegetation remaining.
|
Major vegetation groups |
||||||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
Rainforest |
Eucalypt |
Eucalypt |
Eucalypt |
Eucalypt |
Acacia |
Callitris |
Casuarina |
Melaleuca |
Other |
Eucalypt |
Mallee |
Low |
Acacia |
Other |
Heath |
Tussock |
Other |
Chenopod |
Mangrove |
|
Naracoorte Coastal Plain |
||||||||||||||||||||
|
present vegetation |
- |
12 |
46,652 |
1,308 |
146,048 |
36 |
- |
328 |
4,552 |
104 |
5,092 |
161,060 |
16,644 |
12,724 |
76,764 |
45,388 |
7,760 |
26,068 |
19,496 |
23,488 |
|
cleared vegetation |
- |
0 |
229,888 |
40 |
528,040 |
0 |
- |
0 |
9,320 |
1,712 |
49,424 |
521,712 |
10,740 |
243,268 |
52,192 |
444 |
242,620 |
7,552 |
41,160 |
8,692 |
|
pre-European veg. |
- |
12 |
276,540 |
1,348 |
674,088 |
36 |
- |
328 |
13,872 |
1,816 |
54,516 |
682,772 |
27,384 |
255,992 |
128,956 |
45,832 |
250,380 |
33,620 |
60,656 |
32,180 |
|
percent remaining |
- |
100 |
16.87 |
97.03 |
21.67 |
100 |
- |
100 |
32.81 |
5.73 |
9.34 |
23.59 |
60.78 |
4.97 |
59.53 |
99.03 |
3.10 |
77.54 |
32.14 |
72.99 |
|
Victorian Volcanic Plain |
||||||||||||||||||||
|
present vegetation |
- |
656 |
34,392 |
40 |
49,616 |
180 |
- |
- |
4 |
708 |
1,020 |
1,932 |
4,484 |
0 |
852 |
36 |
4,512 |
872 |
9,320 |
54,724 |
|
cleared vegetation |
- |
12,740 |
31,368 |
112 |
759,796 |
1,316 |
- |
- |
72 |
11,260 |
266,260 |
964 |
34,808 |
16 |
63,208 |
52 |
770,592 |
44,988 |
920 |
364 |
|
pre-European veg. |
- |
13,396 |
65,760 |
152 |
809,412 |
1,496 |
- |
- |
76 |
11,968 |
267,280 |
2,896 |
39,292 |
16 |
64,060 |
88 |
775,104 |
45,860 |
10,240 |
55,088 |
|
percent remaining |
- |
4.90 |
52.30 |
26.32 |
6.13 |
12.03 |
- |
- |
5.26 |
5.92 |
0.38 |
66.71 |
11.41 |
0 |
1.33 |
40.91 |
0.58 |
1.90 |
91.02 |
99.34 |
|
South East Coastal Plain |
||||||||||||||||||||
|
present vegetation |
8 |
14,864 |
109,444 |
928 |
65,112 |
1,008 |
- |
- |
548 |
35,464 |
1,056 |
- |
19,736 |
928 |
9,336 |
9,248 |
1,028 |
22,156 |
37,200 |
29,012 |
|
cleared vegetation |
120 |
46,164 |
328,952 |
316 |
635,084 |
17,880 |
- |
- |
4,004 |
14,476 |
3,292 |
- |
147,780 |
2,004 |
11,920 |
2,356 |
48,040 |
51,460 |
2,396 |
480 |
|
pre-European veg. |
128 |
61,028 |
438,396 |
1,244 |
700,196 |
18,888 |
- |
- |
4,552 |
49,940 |
4,348 |
- |
167,516 |
2,932 |
21,256 |
11,604 |
49,068 |
73,616 |
39,596 |
29,492 |
|
percent remaining |
6.25 |
24.36 |
24.96 |
74.60 |
9.30 |
5.34 |
- |
- |
12.04 |
71.01 |
24.29 |
- |
11.78 |
31.65 |
43.92 |
79.70 |
2.10 |
30.10 |
93.95 |
98.37 |
|
Avon Wheatbelt |
||||||||||||||||||||
|
present vegetation |
- |
4 |
720 |
- |
525,408 |
4 |
- |
6,836 |
532 |
952 |
36,588 |
87,024 |
52,176 |
271,356 |
216,184 |
31,916 |
- |
- |
103,800 |
51,580 |
|
cleared vegetation |
- |
36 |
1,696 |
- |
92 |
152 |
- |
17,668 |
2,012 |
4,532 |
4,824,552 |
813,108 |
339,224 |
488,420 |
848,204 |
387,540 |
- |
- |
235,996 |
168,876 |
|
pre-European veg. |
- |
40 |
2,416 |
- |
525,500 |
156 |
- |
24,504 |
2,544 |
5,484 |
4,861,140 |
900,132 |
391,400 |
759,776 |
1,064,388 |
419,456 |
- |
- |
339,796 |
220,456 |
|
Percent remaining |
- |
10.00 |
29.80 |
- |
99.98 |
2.56 |
- |
27.90 |
20.91 |
17.36 |
0.75 |
9.67 |
13.33 |
35.72 |
20.31 |
7.61 |
- |
- |
30.55 |
23.40 |
|
Victorian Midlands |
||||||||||||||||||||
|
present vegetation |
- |
69,756 |
122,372 |
9,912 |
691,112 |
1,420 |
724 |
- |
- |
300 |
33,892 |
28,056 |
8,180 |
- |
23,972 |
14,132 |
1,648 |
17,348 |
19,712 |
35,100 |
|
cleared vegetation |
- |
90,048 |
83,044 |
9,520 |
1,836,544 |
7,188 |
2,000 |
- |
- |
3,072 |
552,060 |
23,432 |
5,888 |
- |
9,168 |
440 |
68,144 |
14,128 |
8 |
64 |
|
pre-European veg. |
- |
159,804 |
205,416 |
19,432 |
2,527,656 |
8,608 |
2,724 |
- |
- |
3,372 |
585,952 |
51,488 |
14,068 |
- |
33,140 |
14,572 |
69,792 |
31,476 |
19,720 |
35,164 |
|
percent remaining |
- |
43.65 |
59.57 |
51.01 |
27.34 |
16.50 |
26.58 |
- |
- |
8.90 |
5.78 |
54.49 |
58.15 |
- |
72.34 |
96.98 |
2.36 |
55.12 |
99.96 |
99.82 |
Download this table (MS Word 85 KB)
Table 15. Area (ha) of major vegetation groups and clearing for the Tasmanian Northern Slopes IBRA bioregion with 64% of native vegetation remaining.
|
Major vegetation groups |
|||||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
Rainforest |
Eucalypt |
Eucalypt |
Eucalypt |
Eucalypt |
Acacia |
Other |
Eucalypt |
Low |
Other |
Heath |
Tussock |
Other |
Mangrove |
|||||
|
present vegetation |
47,824 |
76,884 |
250,376 |
- |
5,636 |
124 |
168 |
104 |
3,564 |
496 |
420 |
344 |
4,448 |
6,228 |
|||||
|
cleared vegetation |
6,572 |
98,392 |
27,460 |
332 |
48,060 |
6,880 |
- |
- |
39,112 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
|||||
|
pre-European vegetation |
54,396 |
175,276 |
277,836 |
332 |
53,696 |
7,004 |
168 |
104 |
42,676 |
496 |
420 |
344 |
4,448 |
6,228 |
|||||
|
percent remaining |
88 |
44 |
90 |
- |
10 |
2 |
100 |
100 |
8 |
100 |
100 |
100 |
100 |
100 |
|||||
- Indicates that this major vegetation group does not exist in a particular jurisdiction or that the scale and type of mapping compiled has not captured this major vegetation group.
Download this table (MS Word 44 KB)
An example of a bioregion with a much higher total percentage of native vegetation remaining is the Tasmanian Northern Slopes bioregion with 64% of native vegetation remaining. Information on remaining native vegetation extent, clearing and percentage relative to pre-European extent is presented in Table 15. Within this bioregion a number of major vegetation groups have either been cleared or have less than 30% of their pre-European extent remaining. They include eucalypt low open forests, eucalypt woodlands, acacia forests and woodlands and low closed forests and closed shrublands.
Many bioregions cover very large areas. It is useful to analyse the data to assess clearing levels in absolute terms (e.g. from Table 16, in 25 of the 85 bioregions native vegetation clearing exceeds 1 million hectares; these bioregions contain 91 million hectares of cleared land-92% of the total area of native vegetation cleared area in Australia; these bioregions occur across south-western Western Australia, southern South Australia, most of Victoria and New South Wales and central and southern Queensland).
Dust storm, ploughed mallee, Mildura-Renmark Road, VIC © Murray Fagg
Only an additional three bioregions have 800,000 - 1,000,000 ha of clearing. These are the Desert Uplands bioregion in Queensland, the Cobar Peneplain in New South Wales and the Swan Coastal Plain bioregion in Western Australia. The remaining 14 bioregions have 100 000 - 800,000 ha of native vegetation removed.
Table 16. Bioregions with greater than 800,000 ha of native vegetation cleared.
| IBRA bioregion | Cleared native vegetation (ha) |
Total area of region (ha) |
Percent cleared native vegetation |
Percent remaining native vegetation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Desert Uplands | 811,564 | 7,032,020 | 11.5 | 88.5 |
| Cobar Peneplain | 820,516 | 7,350,240 | 11.2 | 88.8 |
| Swan Coastal Plain | 915,752 | 1,512,400 | 60.5 | 39.5 |
| Sydney Basin | 1,142,868 | 3,632,932 | 31.5 | 68.5 |
| Mitchell Grass Downs | 1,167,240 | 33,513,668 | 3.5 | 96.5 |
| Flinders Lofty Block | 1,300,556 | 7,126,092 | 18.3 | 81.7 |
| South East Coastal Plain | 1,339,960 | 1,697,036 | 79.0 | 21.0 |
| Esperance Plains | 1,402,020 | 2,906,644 | 48.2 | 51.8 |
| Nandewar | 1,748,584 | 2,698,724 | 64.8 | 35.2 |
| New England Tableland | 1,774,852 | 3,004,080 | 59.1 | 40.9 |
| Geraldton Sandplains | 1,921,976 | 3,966,988 | 48.4 | 51.6 |
| Naracoorte Coastal Plain | 1,948,364 | 2,541,888 | 76.7 | 23.3 |
| Jarrah forest | 1,959,380 | 4,507,968 | 43.5 | 56.5 |
| Victorian Volcanic Plain | 1,998,844 | 2,162,192 | 92.4 | 7.6 |
| New South Wales North Coast | 2,220,440 | 5,925,384 | 37.5 | 62.5 |
| Victorian Midlands | 2,704,748 | 3,782,384 | 71.5 | 28.5 |
| Mulga Lands | 3,307,320 | 25,299,496 | 13.1 | 86.9 |
| South Eastern Queensland | 3,376,096 | 5,943,728 | 56.8 | 43.2 |
| Mallee | 3,389,464 | 7,394,820 | 45.8 | 54.2 |
| Darling Riverine Plains | 3,428,472 | 10,652,152 | 32.2 | 67.8 |
| South Eastern Highlands | 3,697,800 | 8,743,444 | 42.3 | 57.7 |
| Eyre Yorke Block | 3,954,300 | 6,078,720 | 65.1 | 34.9 |
| Riverina | 4,580,904 | 9,589,472 | 47.8 | 52.2 |
| New South Wales South Western Slopes | 5,715,272 | 8,673,896 | 65.9 | 34.1 |
| Brigalow Belt North | 6,430,308 | 13,552,556 | 47.4 | 52.6 |
| Murray Darling Depression | 7,450,212 | 19,749,136 | 37.7 | 62.3 |
| Avon Wheatbelt | 8,132,108 | 9,517,188 | 85.4 | 14.6 |
| Brigalow Belt South | 14,948,992 | 26,926,740 | 55.5 | 44.5 |
Bioregions contain distinctive geomorphic units that closely align with land capability and development potential, termed subregions. The subregions mentioned previously developed as part of the Audit's Landscape Health initiative (NLWRA 2001c) provide a scale of analysis more appropriate to regional vegetation management planning.
- Of 22 bioregions with 30-70% of native vegetation remaining, 27 of a total of 130 subregions within these bioregions have less than 30% of native vegetation remaining; 33 subregions have greater than 70% of native vegetation remaining (Figures 20, 21)
- Of 28 bioregions with greater than 800,000 ha of native vegetation cleared since European settlement, 39 of a total 174 subregions within these bioregions have less than 30% native vegetation remaining; 61 subregions have greater than 70% of native vegetation remaining
This information with detailed vegetation types within bioregions and subregions is available on the Australian Natural Resources Atlas and provides the level of detail likely to be of value to regional groups as they plan for vegetation management and biodiversity conservation.
Applications
At the bioregion scale, the analysis provides an overview of the status of bioregions in terms of their native vegetation cover (a broad surrogate for biodiversity condition). At the subregion scale, the analysis provides information relevant to vegetation management planning, identifying key land types where management activities such as rehabilitation and protection for biodiversity conservation may be a priority.
Limitations
Bioregions cover large areas and are often bisected by administrative boundaries (e.g. local and State/Territory government boundaries or State/Territory land administration boundaries). Patterns of vegetation clearing are often influenced by these management factors. Therefore, the bioregion analysis is limited as an absolute indicator of bioregion condition.
The analysis is also limited by the quality of the present vegetation information compiled into the National Vegetation Information System and in development of the major vegetation groups. The limitations and guidelines provide information on the present vegetation products. In particular, recent clearing in some areas of Tasmania, New South Wales and Queensland are not mapped.
What sources of information were used?
View the guidelines for the interpretation of vegetation mapping products.
References
View the references used in the Australian Native Vegetation Assessment 2001.
Partnerships
Australian Native Vegetation Assessment 2001 was facilitated and coordinated by the National Land and Water Resources Audit and prepared in partnership with State, Territory and Commonwealth agencies:
Australian Capital Territory
Department of Urban Services
www.urbanservices.act.gov.au
New South Wales
NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service
www.npws.nsw.gov.au
NSW Botanic Gardens
www.rbgsyd.gov.au
Northern Territory
Department of Natural Resources, Environment and The Arts
www.nreta.nt.gov.au
Queensland
Environment Protection Agency
www.epa.qld.gov.au
South Australia
Planning SA
www.planning.sa.gov.au
Tasmania
Department of Primary Industries, Water and Environment
www.dpiwe.tas.gov.au
Victoria
Department of Sustainability and Environment
www.dse.vic.gov.au
Western Australia
Agriculture WA
www.agric.wa.gov.au
Commonwealth
Australian Greenhouse Office
www.greenhouse.gov.au
Department of Environment and Heritage
www.deh.gov.au
Further information
View the Australian Native Vegetation Assessment 2001 report.
The National Vegetation Information System Framework framework.
View Landscape Health in Australia 2001 report.
View the Australian Catchment, River and Estuary Assessment 2002.
View the Australian Terrestrial Biodiversity Assessment 2002.
View all Theme Reports from the National Land and Water Resources Audit.
Link to Atlas on-line mapping for maps of major vegetation groups and other natural resource data.
Link to data available for down load.
Before you download
Most publications are downloadable as PDF files. Adobe Acrobat Reader is required to view PDF files.
If you are unable to access a publication, please contact us to organise a suitable alternative format.
Key
Links to an another web site
Opens a pop-up window

