Temperate Eucalypt Woodlands: a Review of Their Status, Processes Threatening Their Persistence and Techniques for Restoration
Colin J. Yates and Richard J. Hobbs
Abstract
Temperate eucalypt woodlands were once widespread throughout southern
Australia and Tasmania. Following European settlement, woodlands were cleared
for agriculture, or grazed and converted to pasture. In the wheatbelts of
south-western and south-eastern Australia, woodlands have been almost
completely eliminated from the landscape with as little as 3% of some
woodland types remaining. As a consequence, some temperate eucalypt woodland
communities are amongst the most poorly conserved ecosystems in Australia. The
main effect of widespread clearing and grazing has been the loss of habitat.
This has had a devastating impact on the woodland flora and fauna. A number of
species have become extinct and many are threatened; many others have
undergone regional and local population declines. Woodlands now occur
throughout much of their former range as remnants of varying size, quality and
isolation. Many of these are under threat from further clearing, rising saline
water tables and increased inundation, livestock grazing, nutrient enrichment,
soil structural decline, altered fire regimes and the invasion of exotic
weeds. The degradation and loss of biodiversity in temperate eucalypt
woodlands will continue unless clearing stops and the management of remnants
changes; this will invariably involve ecological restoration both at the patch
and landscape level. The review discusses approaches to restoration and
reveals that there are few data in the published literature describing
techniques for reversing degrading processes and restoring diversity structure
and function in remnant woodlands. This information is urgently needed. Past
research on temperate eucalypt woodlands has focused on identifying the
processes of degradation and these are now relatively well documented. There
is a need to shift the focus of research to developing solutions for these
problems.
Australian Journal of Botany 45(6) 949 - 973 (1997) doi:10.1071/BT96091





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