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Halosarcia lylei low open-shrubland in the Murray Darling Depression Bioregion: EEC(ma) 2 December 2011 Howell Shrublands in the New England Tableland and Nandewar Bioregions: EEC(ma) 2 December 2011 Hunter Floodplain Red Gum Woodland in the NSW North Coast and Sydney Basin Bioregions: EEC(ma) 8 July 2011
The Mulga Lands are an interim Australian bioregion of eastern Australia consisting of dry sandy plains with low mulga woodlands and shrublands that are dominated by Acacia aneura (mulga). [2] The Eastern Australia mulga shrublands ecoregion is coterminous with the Mulga Lands bioregion.
It is found across Australia, covering 20% of arid regions, [2] including much of southwestern Queensland, New South Wales, South Australia, and Western Australia. [3] [4]The Mulga Lands are an interim Australian bioregion located in northwestern New South Wales and southwestern Queensland in eastern Australia consisting of dry sandy plains with low mulga woodlands and shrublands that are ...
Extent of Mallee Woodlands and Shrublands plant communities across southern Australia. Mallee Woodlands and Shrublands is one of 32 Major Vegetation Groups defined by the Australian Government Department of the Environment and Energy [1] [2] and one of the 189 habitats in the HOTW habitats of the World classification.
The Cumberland Plain Woodland, also known as Cumberland Plain Bushland [1] and Western Sydney woodland, [2] is a grassy woodland community found predominantly in Western Sydney, New South Wales, Australia, that comprises an open tree canopy, a groundcover with grasses and herbs, usually with layers of shrubs and/or small trees.
The ecology of Sydney, located in the state of New South Wales, Australia, is diverse for its size, [1] where it would mainly feature biomes such as grassy woodlands or savannas and some sclerophyll forests, with some pockets of mallee shrublands, riparian forests, heathlands, and wetlands, in addition to small temperate and subtropical rainforest fragments.
Listed under the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 as and endangered vegetation community and as 'critically endangered' under the NSW Biodiversity Conservation Act 2016, the Eastern Suburbs Banksia Scrub is found on ancient, nutrient poor sands either on dunes or on promontories. [1]
Tecticornia lylei is an endangered species in NSW and rare in Victoria, [2] with the numbers especially low in the once plentiful low open-shrubland in the Murray Darling Depression Bioregion. Requiring particularly saline soils to survive, it occurs on saline clay soils on the beds of small salt lakes and around the perimeter of larger salt lakes.