Coastal Swamp Oak Forests, also known as Swamp Oak Floodplain Forests and Estuarine swamp oak forests, are scattered riparian forests found in southeastern Queensland to southeastern New South Wales, Australia that would predominantly feature Casuarina glauca (swamp oaks). They occur within the South Eastern Queensland, NSW North Coast, Sydney Basin, or South East Corner bioregions.[1]
Coastal Swamp Oak Forest of South-east Queensland and New South Wales | |
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Ecology | |
Realm | Australasia |
Biome | Riparian forests |
Geography | |
Country | Australia |
Elevation | 20–50 metres (66–164 ft) |
Climate type | Humid subtropical climate (Cfa) Oceanic climate (Cfb) |
Soil types | Alluvium, clay loam, sandy loam, peat |
Geography
editOnly about 26% of their original extent remaining, Coastal Swamp Oak Forests generally occur on light or alluvial soil on coastal flats, floodplains, drainage lines, lake margins, wetlands and estuarine fringes where soils are at least at times saturated, marshy or overflowed. Some may occur on coastal dune swales or flats.[1]
Having a dense to sparse tree layer, the community is mostly found as disjointed residue patches along the coast between Curtis Island (south-east Queensland), north of Gladstone, and Bermagui (southern New South Wales), up to 50 m above sea level (ASL) but usually less than 20 m ASL and they are usually within 30km of the coast, but in several areas, such as along tidal river catchments, the community can be present more than 100km inland.[1]
Extent
editMajor presence include: around 350 ha on the Tweed lowlands; to a lesser degree than 650 ha on the lower Clarence floodplain; less than 400 ha on the lower Macleay floodplain; less than 3,200 ha in the Hunter Valley; less than 5,200 ha in the Sydney and South Coast region and less than 1,000 ha in the Eden region. The community's composition may alter from open forests to low woodlands, scrubs or reed lands with scattered trees.[2]
Ecology
editAlthough swamp oaks are the principal trees that occur in the canopy, there also exist many other species such as, Acmena smithii, Alphitonia excelsa, Melaleuca salicina, Cupaniopsis anacardioides, Glochidion ferdinandi, Parsonsia straminea and at times Melaleuca spp., where they shape a sub-canopy layer.[1]
The saline understorey consists of Baumea juncea, Alexfloydia repens, Baumea juncea, Juncus kraussii, Phragmites australis, Selliera radicans, Cynodon dactylon, Phragmites australis, Parsonsia straminea, Geitonoplesium cymosum, Stephania japonica and Suaeda australis, with freshwater species being Blechnum indicum, Carex appressa, Gahnia clarkei, Centella asiatica, Oplismenus imbecillis, Commelina cyanea, Hypolepis muelleri, Persicaria decipiens, Lomandra longifolia, Microlaena stipoides and Viola banksii. The total canopy cover is least 10%.[1]
Biodiversity
editThe animals that occupy the community also dwell in conterminous wetlands, grasslands, woodlands and forests. The animals include bats, possums, bandicoots, birds, frogs, turtles and other reptiles.[2] Mammals include Cercartetus nanus, Myotis macropus, Phascogale tapoatafa, Pteropus poliocephalus, Syconycteris australis, Phascolarctos cinereus, Antechinus stuartii, Perameles nasuta, Potorous tridactylus, Pseudomys novaehollandiae and Rattus lutreolus.[1]
Reptiles present are, Cyclodomorphus michaeli, Egernia mcpheei, Boiga irregularis, Hemiaspis signata, Hoplocephalus bitorquatus, Pseudechis porphyriacus, Tropidechis carinatus, Chelodina longicollis, Emydura macquarii, Elseya albagula, Elusor macrurus and Wollumbinia georgesi.[1]
Plant communities
editVarious state vegetation mapping units contain the Coastal Swamp Oak Forest, and patches of it are likely to correspond with the Plant Community Types (PCT) listed in the table below:[3]
Common name | NRM Regions |
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Swamp oak swamp forest of the coastal lowlands NSW North Coast Bioregion | Northern Rivers |
Swamp Oak forested wetland of saline areas of coastal estuaries | North Coast |
Milky mangrove woodland of tidal estuaries | North Coast |
Swamp oak – broad-leaved paperbark, willow bottlebrush floodplain forested wetland | North Coast |
Broad-leaved paperbark, swamp oak, tall sedge swamp forest on alluvial soils | North Coast |
Swamp oak open forest on riverflats of the Cumberland Plain and Hunter Valley | Sydney Metro/Hawkesbury-Nepean |
Swamp-oak, sea rush swamp forest | Hunter Valley and Central Rivers |
Swamp oak-prickly paperbark tall sedge forest Central Coast and Lower North Coast | Hunter/Central Rivers |
Coastal freshwater swamp forest | Sydney Metro |
Swamp oak swamp forest fringing estuaries of the Sydney Basin and South East Corner Bioregion | Hunter/Central Rivers; Hawksbury Nepean; Sydney Metro; Southern Rivers |
Swamp paperbark-swamp oak | Sydney Metro and Southern Rivers |
Coastal freshwater lagoons of the Sydney Basin Bioregion and South East Corner Bioregion | Sydney Metro and Southern Rivers |
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b c d e f g Conservation advice (incorporating listing advice) for the Coastal Swamp Oak (Casuarina glauca) Forest of New South Wales and South East Queensland ecological community Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999. Retrieved 14 September 2022. Text was copied from this source, which is available under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
- ^ a b Swamp Oak Floodplain Forest of the New South Wales North Coast, Sydney Basin and South East Corner Bioregions - profile Office of Environment & Heritage. Retrieved 14 September 2022.
- ^ Coastal Swamp Oak (Casuarina glauca) Forest of South-east Queensland and New South Wales: Proposal to list as a nationally protected ecological community Department of the Environment and Energy. Retrieved August 14, 2024 This article incorporates text from this source, which is available under the CC BY 4.0 license.