Coordinates: 34°48′S 149°31′E / 34.8°S 149.52°E / -34.8; 149.52

Southern Tablelands Temperate Grassland

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Southern Tablelands Temperate Grassland
Ecology
RealmAustralasia
BiomeTemperate grasslands, savannas, and shrublands
Borders
Geography
CountryAustralia
Elevation560–1,200 metres (1,840–3,940 ft)
Coordinates34°48′S 149°31′E / 34.8°S 149.52°E / -34.8; 149.52
Climate typeSubtropical highland climate (Cfb)
Soil typesClay

The Southern Tablelands Temperate Grassland, formally Natural Temperate Grassland of the Southern Tablelands, is a temperate grassland community situated in the Southern Tablelands and Monaro region of New South Wales, extending into the Australian Capital Territory and the Victorian border.[1][2] Listed as Endangered under the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999, the grassland is dominated by reasonably tall, dense to open tussock grasses.[3][4]

Geography

The community is commonly present in the Southern Tablelands of NSW and ACT, where it covers areas such as, Goulburn, Braidwood, Yass, Abercrombie River, Boorowa, Jindabyne, Bombala, south to the Victorian border at Delegate, on the eastern boundary of Kosciuszko National Park. The area features relatively low rainfall between 560 and 1200 metres in altitude, with low nutrient, highly textured soils on the valleys and low slopes (which grade with grassy woodland), and on the wider plains.[1]

20 000 ha of natural temperate grassland was present in the ACT prior to European settlement and in NSW around 450 000 ha of grassland occurred. In the ACT there are four reserved sites that comprise a total area of 206 ha of grassland and in NSW there are two proposed nature reserves totaling around 200 ha. The region lies on broad plains with poor drainage and features cold air inversions that encourages frosts which suppresses tree growth.[2] The scattered community is bounded by the Snowy Mountains and Brindabella Range in the southwest, with he northwestern boundary passing from Burrinjuck Dam and to the Lachlan River and north to Wyangala Dam.[3]

Ecology

The area predominantly features moderately tall (25-50 cm) to tall (50 cm-1 m), thick to open tussock grasses, such as Bothriochloa macra, Themeda australis, Austrodanthonia spp., Austrostipa and Poa spp with up to 70% of the species being forbs, which are namely daisies, lilies and native legumes.[1] The grassland is generally treeless, though trees may be present in low densities (10%), either as sporadic individuals or in clusters, with the main tree species being Eucalyptus melliodora. Herbs, wildflowers and forbs species include:[3]

Animals

References

  1. ^ a b c Natural Temperate Grassland of the Southern Tablelands of NSW and the Australian Capital Territory. Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water. Australian Government. Retrieved 7 September 2022.
  2. ^ a b Natural Temperate Grassland of the South Eastern Highlands - profile Office of Environment & Heritage. Retrieved 7 September 2022.
  3. ^ a b c National Recovery Plan for Natural Temperate Grassland of the Southern Tablelands (NSW and ACT): An Endangered Ecological Community Environment ACT 2005 National Recovery Plan for Natural Temperate Grassland of the Southern Tablelands (NSW and ACT): an endangered ecological community (Environment ACT, Canberra). Retrieved 7 September 2022. Text was copied from this source, which is available under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
  4. ^ Temperate Grassland new listing, definition; critically endangered Conservation Council.org.au. Retrieved 7 September 2022.