Australian Natural Resources Atlas

Natural Resource Topics

Biodiversity Assessment - Nsw North Coast

Nsw North Coast

Location Map

Introduction

Natural values

Click here to link to a table of natural values within each subregion

Wetlands

Nationally important wetlands

Map: IBRA map showing DIWA locations, towns, subregions, major roads and reserves and most common threatening processes.

IBRA map showing DIWA locations, towns, subregions, major roads and reserves and most common threatening processes.

Click here to link to a table of Australia's Important Wetlands (Directory of Important Wetlands of Australia): their type, condition, trend and threatening processes within each subregion.

Regionally important wetlands

Click here to link to a table of provisional identification of wetlands of regional significance: their type and special values within each subregion. The reliability of the overall subregional assessment is indicated.

Click here to link to a table of provisional identification of wetlands of regional significance: their condition, trend and threatening processes within each subregion.

Riparian Zones

Map: Riparian threatening processes.

Riparian threatening processes.

Click here to link to a table of riparian zones: their average condition, trend and threatening processes for each subregion. The reliability of this overall assessment is indicated.

Ecosystems at risk

Map: IBRA map showing frequency of threatening processes for ecosystems.

Click here to link to a table of provisional list of threatened ecosystems in Australia: their broad vegetation type (National Vegetation Information System - Major Vegetation Subgroup), recommended status, current legislative protection as a threatened ecosystem, trend and bioregional distribution. These ecosystems are arranged in the bioregion of their principal occurrence. The reliability of the recommended status is indicated.

Click here to link to a table of provisional list of threatened ecosystems in each subregion: their threatening processes.

Click here to link to a table of provisional list of threatened ecosystems in each subregion: their recommended recovery actions

Species at risk

Map: IBRA map showing frequency of threatening processes for species.

IBRA map showing frequency of threatening processes for species.

Click here to link to a table of species at risk in each subregion: their status, trend and subregional distribution. The reliability of the assessment of trend is indicated and whether recovery plans have been prepared.

Click here to link to a table of species at risk in each subregion: their threatening processes.

Click here to link to a table of species at risk in each subregion: their status recommended recovery actions.

Birds

A diverse range of subtropical habitats makes the New South Wales North Coast one of the richest bioregions for birds in Australia. The bioregion also has a high number of endemics and number of species per genus, indicating a high internal variability. The overall score for range limitation is moderately high as well; with rainforest habitats containing many limited range and threatened taxa. The bioregion is particularly important for the Logrunner and Paradise Riflebird, the Vulnerable Albert's Lyrebird, the Rufous Scrub-bird, including both the northern Vulnerable and Near Threatened southern subspecies, and the Critically Endangered Coxen's Fig-Parrot and northern subspecies of Eastern Bristlebird. A couple of small islands off Newcastle also support the only breeding population of Gould's Petrel. The exotic bird loading is comparatively low. As with many southeastern regions there have been declines in the reporting rates of grassland species as well as ground-feeding insectivores. There have also been declines in temperate woodland and forest reporting rates, in keeping with some nearby bioregions, but against the national trend.

Status: Highly diverse bioregion on the McPherson/MacLeay Overlap Zone. Upland rainforest avifauna largely intact; lowlands highly modified; moderate exotic species loading.

Rare and threatened: Coxen's Fig-Parrot, Albert's Lyrebird, Rufous Scrub-bird, Eastern Bristlebird, Logrunner, Paradise Riflebird in rainforest; Gould's Petrel on islands off Newcastle.

Increasers: White-headed Pigeon, Long-billed Corella, Little Corella, Rainbow Lorikeet, Common Myna.

Indicators: Australasian Bittern, Black Bittern, Banded Lapwing, Gang-gang Cockatoo, Rufous Scrub-bird, Red-browed Treecreeper, Brown Treecreeper, Scarlet Robin, Flame Robin, Hooded Robin, Jacky Winter, Grey-crowned Babbler, Varied Sittella, Crested Shrike-tit, Restless Flycatcher, Diamond Firetail .

Trend: Lower reporting rates for grassland, woodland and forest guilds, also ground-feeding insectivores.

Scenario: Continued losses of woodland birds sensitive to fragmentation; rainforest birds stable.

Actions: Protect, enhance and link woodland fragments. No grazing in representative areas and the adoption of reduced, conservative grazing rates in key habitat across the bioregion. Protect or rehabilitate catchments of major wetlands retaining values for freshwater birds. See also Action Plan for Australian Birds 2000 Coordinated Conservation Plan: Subtropical Forests.

Click hereto download a summary report including the physical characteristics of the bioregion, a species list, and summary statistics [Excel file]. The file may open on your screen. To save it to your system 'Save as' under the File menu.

Mammals

Number of species and status

There are 80 mammal species within this bioregion. (The maximum number of species recorded in a bioregion is 86 and the minimum is 25).

Click here to link to a table of number of species in each status class for this bioregion.

Click here to link to a list of mammal species and their status for this bioregion.

Critical weight range

The critical weight range (35 - 5500 g) of mammals is the size range of Australian mammals that have been most affected by environmental changes following European settlement. In this bioregion, the proportion of mammal fauna within the critical weight range is .475. (The maximum proportion of fauna within the critical weight range recorded in a bioregion is 0.632 and the minimum is 0.222).

Faunal Attrition Index

Faunal attrition is a measure of contraction or loss of species richness with a region. A high index value means many species have declined or are extinct in the bioregion. The index can be used to compare the status of mammal fauna to regional attributes such as changes since European settlement and average annual rainfall. The Faunal Attrition Index for mammals in this bioregion is .17. (The maximum faunal attrition index value recorded in a bioregion is 0.66 and the minimum is 0).

Click here to link to a table of Faunal Attrition Index for groups of mammals shows the contributions of each group to overall patterns of faunal decline.

Faunal Contraction Index

A range contraction index is a measure of the extent to which the range inhabited by a particular species has contracted. A high index value means that many of the species comprising the region's original mammal fauna have contracted from a high proportion of the regions they originally occurred in. The faunal contraction index for the mammal fauna in this bioregion is .15. (The maximum faunal contraction index value recorded in a bioregion is 0.51 and the minimum is 0.07).

Faunal Endemism Index

Endemic species are those restricted to certain regions. Regions containing endemic species are considered to have high biodiversity conservation values because opportunities to conserve those species do not exist elsewhere. A high index value means that the species comprising the original mammal fauna typically occurred in few bioregions. The faunal endemism index value for the mammal fauna in this bioregion is .71. (The maximum faunal endemism index value recorded in a bioregion is 0.79 and the minimum is 0.52).

New Endemism Index

Extant (still surviving) species that have undergone major range contractions can be considered 'new endemics'. Bioregions that contain new endemic species are often important refugia for threatened species. The new endemism index for the mammal fauna in this bioregion is .5. (The maximum new endemism index value recorded in a bioregion is 0.93 and the minimum is 0.5).

Table: Translocated Species

There is no data available for this table within the bioregion.

Exotic Mammals

The number of introduced exotic mammal species that occur within this bioregion is 16. (The maximum number of introduced exotic mammal species in a bioregion is 16 and the minimum is 5).

Click here to link to a list of introduced exotic mammal species for this bioregion.

Extinct mammal species

The number of extinct mammal species that previously occurred within this bioregion is 1. (The maximum number of extinct mammal species in a bioregion is 29 and the minimum is 0).

Click here to link to a list of extinct mammal species for this bioregion.

Management responses

Reserve consolidation

Click here to link to a table of comprehensiveness, adequacy and representativeness (CAR) of the National Reserve System in terms of ecosystems and area sampled and a ranking of reserve management. The bioregional priority for consolidating the National Reserve System is based on this CAR analysis and threat.

Click here to link to a table of bioregional and subregional priorities and ecosystem priorities to consolidate the National Reserve System and associated ecosystem constraints.

Off-park conservation for species and ecosystem recovery

Integrated NRM

Map: IBRA map showing existing projects part of NRM.

IBRA map showing existing projects part of NRM.

Click here to link to a table of contribution of integrated Natural Resource Management to the protection of biodiversity in each subregion: existing measures and effectiveness.

Click here to link to a table of contribution of integrated Natural Resource Management to the protection of biodiversity in each subregion: feasible opportunities and comments.

Further Information & Gaps

Click here to link to a table of some major data gaps in each subregion in terms of protecting biodiversity.

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