Last updated:
10 Dec 2020
Distribution of the species within this region
The Wild Orange is known or predicted to occur in the following sub-regions of the
Nandewar Interim Biogeographic Regionalisation of Australia Region.
Click on column headers to sort
Vegetation formations, classes and types
In this region the Wild Orange - Nandewar is known to
be associated with the following vegetation formations and classes. Click on a name to get background information
about it.
- Dry sclerophyll forests (shrub/grass sub-formation)
- North-west Slopes Dry Sclerophyll Woodlands
- 856 Grey Box - Rough-barked Apple shrub/grass open forest of northern parts of the Nandewar Bioregion and New England Tableland Bioregion
- 527 Mugga Ironbark - Black Cypress Pine shrubby open forest mainly in the Nandewar Bioregion and northern Brigalow Belt South Bioregion
- 549 Silver-leaved Ironbark - Black Cypress Pine +/- White Box shrubby open forest mainly in the northern Nandewar Bioregion
- Dry sclerophyll forests (shrubby sub-formation)
- Western Slopes Dry Sclerophyll Forests
- 610 Black Cypress Pine - Dwyer's Gum low woodland / open forest on rocky ridges mainly of the Nandewar Range
- 1381 Narrow-leaved Ironbark shrubby woodland of the Brigalow Belt South bioregion
- Yetman Dry Sclerophyll Forests
- 791 Cypress pine - Bulloak shrubby woodland of northern Brigalow Belt South Bioregion
- 810 Dirty Gum - White Cypress Pine - Northern Smooth-barked Apple shrub/grass open forest in the far north of the Nandewar Bioregion
- 1380 Narrow-leaved Ironbark - pine - Brown Bloodwood shrub/grass open forest in the north west of the Nandewar Bioregion
- 998 Northern Smooth-barked Apple - pine shrubby open-forest of the northern Nandewar Bioregion and Brigalow Belt South Bioregion
- 235 Yelarbon Buloke - Western Grey Box - spinifex low open woodland / hummock grassland on sandy sodic soils