The eucalypt woodlands of Western Australia: Lessons from the birds

Despite the clearing of the wheatbelt, Western Australia retains the most extensive and least disturbed temperate woodlands in southern Australia. The Great Western Woodlands falls beyond the clearing line and is a 16 million hectare region of eucalypt woodland associated with mallee, heaths, and sa...

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Main Authors: Majer, Jonathan, Recher, H. F., Davis Jr., W. E.
Format: Book Chapter
Published: 2010
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/42152
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author Majer, Jonathan
Recher, H. F.
Davis Jr., W. E.
author_facet Majer, Jonathan
Recher, H. F.
Davis Jr., W. E.
author_sort Majer, Jonathan
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Despite the clearing of the wheatbelt, Western Australia retains the most extensive and least disturbed temperate woodlands in southern Australia. The Great Western Woodlands falls beyond the clearing line and is a 16 million hectare region of eucalypt woodland associated with mallee, heaths, and salt lakes (Watson et al. 2008). Although the Great Western Woodlands has a long history of disturbance by mining, roads, logging, and wildfires, a core of more than 6 million hectares has never been grazed by domestic stock, with large areas unaffected by mining or logging. The lack of grazing is particularly significant, as domestic grazers compact the soil, remove the litter layer and change the structure and species composition of the vegetation. Grazing may not be as severe an impact as clearing for farming (but see Majer et al. this book), a practice which continues in Western Australia (Fulton and Majer 2006), but ungrazed woodlands are a unique and precious heritage in the 21st century. Their management and conservation should be a national priority.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-421522020-07-06T03:50:46Z The eucalypt woodlands of Western Australia: Lessons from the birds Majer, Jonathan Recher, H. F. Davis Jr., W. E. Despite the clearing of the wheatbelt, Western Australia retains the most extensive and least disturbed temperate woodlands in southern Australia. The Great Western Woodlands falls beyond the clearing line and is a 16 million hectare region of eucalypt woodland associated with mallee, heaths, and salt lakes (Watson et al. 2008). Although the Great Western Woodlands has a long history of disturbance by mining, roads, logging, and wildfires, a core of more than 6 million hectares has never been grazed by domestic stock, with large areas unaffected by mining or logging. The lack of grazing is particularly significant, as domestic grazers compact the soil, remove the litter layer and change the structure and species composition of the vegetation. Grazing may not be as severe an impact as clearing for farming (but see Majer et al. this book), a practice which continues in Western Australia (Fulton and Majer 2006), but ungrazed woodlands are a unique and precious heritage in the 21st century. Their management and conservation should be a national priority. 2010 Book Chapter http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/42152 restricted
spellingShingle Majer, Jonathan
Recher, H. F.
Davis Jr., W. E.
The eucalypt woodlands of Western Australia: Lessons from the birds
title The eucalypt woodlands of Western Australia: Lessons from the birds
title_full The eucalypt woodlands of Western Australia: Lessons from the birds
title_fullStr The eucalypt woodlands of Western Australia: Lessons from the birds
title_full_unstemmed The eucalypt woodlands of Western Australia: Lessons from the birds
title_short The eucalypt woodlands of Western Australia: Lessons from the birds
title_sort eucalypt woodlands of western australia: lessons from the birds
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/42152