Last updated:
26 Feb 2024
Distribution of the species within this region
The Black-tailed Godwit is known or predicted to occur in the following sub-regions of the
Sydney Basin Interim Biogeographic Regionalisation of Australia Region.
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Vegetation formations, classes and types
In this region the Black-tailed Godwit - Sydney Basin is known to
be associated with the following vegetation formations and classes. Click on a name to get background information
about it.
- Saline wetlands
- Inland Saline lakes
- 166 Disturbed annual saltbush forbland on clay plains and inundation zones mainly of south-western NSW
- 189 Ephemeral forbland wetland of low-saline lake-beds of the arid and semi-arid (warm) climate zones
- 149 Neverfail Grass - ephemeral herbaceous grassland forbland of interdune claypans mainly in the arid climate zone
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- Mangrove Swamps
- 4090 Far North Estuarine Mangrove-Swamp Oak Forest
- 4140 Far North Mangrove Forest
- 4091 Grey Mangrove-River Mangrove Forest
- Saltmarshes
- 4094 Estuarine Club Rush-Arrowgrass Wetland
- 4095 Paspalum vaginatum-Samphire Saltmarsh
- 4096 Prickly Couch-Sea Rush Saltmarsh
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- Semi-arid woodlands (grassy sub-formation)
- North-west Floodplain Woodlands
- 38 Black Box low woodland wetland lining ephemeral watercourses or fringing lakes and clay pans of semi-arid (hot) and arid zones
- 37 Black Box woodland wetland on NSW central and northern floodplains including the Darling Riverine Plains Bioregion and Brigalow Belt South Bioregion.
- 39 Coolabah - River Coobah - Lignum woodland wetland of frequently flooded floodplains mainly in the Darling Riverine Plains Bioregion
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