Authors
Kristen J Williams, Andrew Ford, Dan F Rosauer, Naamal De Silva, Russell Mittermeier, Caroline Bruce, Frank W Larsen, Chris Margules
Publication date
2011/8/13
Book
Biodiversity hotspots: distribution and protection of conservation priority areas
Pages
295-310
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Description
The newly identified “Forests of East Australia” Global High Biodiversity Hotspot corresponds with two World Wildlife Fund (WWF) Ecoregions: the Eastern Australian Temperate Forests and Queensland’s Tropical Rain forests. The region contains more than 1,500 endemic vascular plants, meeting the criterion for global biodiversity significance, and more than 70% of natural areas have been cleared or degraded, meeting the criterion for a hotspot. The hotspot, although covering a large latitudinal range (15.5°–35.6° South), has a predominantly summer rainfall pattern with increasing rainfall seasonality northwards into tropical areas of north Queensland. It covers large tracts of elevated tablelands and drier inland slopes, particularly in New South Wales, where it extends inland beyond the New England Tablelands and the Great Dividing Range. Varied soils result in a mosaic pattern of vegetation …
Total citations
20112012201320142015201620172018201920202021202220232024426101214151515243221175
Scholar articles
KJ Williams, A Ford, DF Rosauer, N De Silva… - Biodiversity hotspots: distribution and protection of …, 2011