Nature conservation

Threatened species

New England Peppermint (Eucalyptus nova-anglica) Grassy Woodlands - profile

Indicative distribution


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known
predicted
The areas shown in pink and/purple are the sub-regions where the species or community is known or predicted to occur. They may not occur thoughout the sub-region but may be restricted to certain areas. ( click here to see geographic restrictions). The information presented in this map is only indicative and may contain errors and omissions.
Scientific name: New England Peppermint (Eucalyptus nova-anglica) Grassy Woodlands
Conservation status in NSW: Not listed
Commonwealth status: Critically Endangered
Gazetted date: 01 Mar 2011
Profile last updated: 12 Apr 2024

Description

On the eastern Australian mainland, temperate eucalypt woodlands occupy a transitional zone between the higher rainfall forested margins, associated with the ranges and slopes of the Great Dividing Range, and the shrublands and grasslands on the plains of the arid interior (Beadle, 1981; AUSLIG, 1990). Grassy eucalypt woodlands formerly covered an extensive, continuous belt of vegetation from southern Queensland through New South Wales and northern Victoria to eastern South Australia (Moore, 1970; Yates and Hobbs, 1997). This belt covered several floristic associations, many of which intergraded with each other and with other vegetation types (Prober and Thiele, 1995). The New England Peppermint (Eucalyptus nova-anglica) Grassy Woodlands ecological community is a type of temperate grassy eucalypt woodland to open forest in which the tree canopy is dominated or co-dominated by Eucalyptus nova-anglica (New England Peppermint) and the ground layer is mostly grassy. Eucalyptus nova-anglica is a tree species that is restricted to northeastern NSW and the far south of Queensland (Brooker et al., 2002). In order to meet the definition of the TEC sites must satisfy condition criteria stipulated in the Listing Advice and/or Conservation Advice. Typically condition is assessed by reference to patch size and vegetation structure thresholds or species composition metrics.

Distribution

Regional distribution and habitat

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Recovery strategies

IBRA Bioregion IBRA Subregion Known or predicted Geographic restrictions region