Ecological Communities - A Biological Survey of the Nullarbor Region

Documents
for download from this site are in PDF format and you will need Adobe Acrobat
Reader to view them. The reader is free and can be downloaded from the Adobe
website.
Summary
The Field Survey
|
Survey camp on the Nullarbor
Plain near Ivy Cave
(Photo: Steve Doyle)
|
| |
|
The largest population of
the Southern Hairy-nosed Wombat occurs on the southern Nullarbor
Plain
(Photo: Tony Robinson)
|
| |
|
McKenzies Dragon now known
from widely separated populations to the west and east of
the treeless plain
(Photo: Peter Canty)
|
| |
|
|
Brown snakes like this Dugite
are common on the Nullarbor Plain
(Photo: Steve Doyle)
|
The Biological Survey of the Nullarbor area was a cooperative project
between the Department of Conservation and Land Management in Western
Australia and the Department of Environment and Planning in South
Australia. The standard quadrat sampling methods and the resulting
biological databases developed on this survey went on form the basis
of such broad-scale surveys in both States.
The vertebrate fauna and vegetation of a 32,000,000 ha Study
Area encompassing the Nullarbor region in Western and South
Australia was surveyed in April and September 1984. The species
of plants and vertebrates were systematically recorded from
an array of fixed quadrats centered on sixteen campsites distributed
across the Study Area. The quadrats were selected to represent
the biological diversity of the Nullarbor and provide a data
base of assemblage descriptions amenable to quantitative analyses
for ecological pattern. All previous biological work carried
out on the Nullarbor was summarised and an extensive bibliography provided.
The patterns of the plant, mammal, bird and reptile sub-sets
of the assemblages were described using the numerical taxonomy
package NTP and the biological gradients identified were related
to environmental variation across the Study Area. Finally
the total presence/absence database was analysed and eleven
distinctive community-types recognised in relation to three
major axes of change in the district's biota. In turn, these
were correlated with climatic and geochemical scalars of the
physical environment. An expanded conservation reserve system
was designed to encompass the identified biotic variation
of the whole Nullarbor region.
Survey Results
The Nullarbor region biological survey consolidated, for
the first time, a considerable amount of existing data on
the plants and animals of this large and important region
of southern Australia. Many new records were added from the
survey quadrat sampling, and, for the first time a systematic
picture of the biological variation across the region was obtained.
A total list of 794 species of vascular plants was compiled
for the study area from the survey results and the herbarium
collections available in Perth and Adelaide.
Fifty-six species of mammals are now known to have occurred
in the Nullarbor region at the time of European settlement
of which 38 (27 native and 9 introduced species) were recorded
during the survey. An examination of the extensive un-dated
sub-fossil bone material from a large number of caves spread
across the region revealed a number of additional species,
which may also have lived there, in recent times.
Two hundred and forty nine (including 3 introduced species
and 89 species of water, shore or sea birds) bird species
are known from the region. An old nest and eggs of the extinct
Masked Owl was discovered in Ivy Cave, and data was collected
on the Nullarbor Quail-thrush and the Naretha Blue Bonnet,
the only two forms restricted to the Nullarbor area.
Eighty-five species of reptile and one frog are now known
from the area Eleven of the pre-1984 records for the area
were not encountered during the survey, but these were species
of sandy surfaces and are more common outside the study area.
A large number of new records and range extensions were recorded
for an area previously poorly known as far as reptiles are concerned.
Reference: McKenzie, N.L. and Robinson, A.C.
(eds.). (1987). A Biological Survey of the Nullarbor Region,
South and Western Australia in 1984. S.A. Department of Environment
and Planning, W.A. Department of Conservation and Land Management,
Australian National Parks and Wildlife Service.
Full Report
A full report of 'A Biological Survey of the Nullarbor Region,
South and Western Australia' is available as Acrobat PDF files.
Please note that some of the above files are large and may
take a while to download and to search these files you will
need to open the "Bookmarks tag" within each file.
If you have any problems please contact Robert
Brandle or phone (61 8) 8222 9471.
|