FF The Arnhem Land plateau is an enormous sandstone tableland, roughly the size of Switzerland. This is country that has been home to Indigenous people for tens of thousands of years and the rock paintings found throughout the plateau are thought to represent the longest continuous record of human culture anywhere in the world.
The plateau of western Arnhem Land is the most significant region in the NT for biodiversity. It contains far more of the NT’s endemic species than anywhere else (including at least 160 plant species found nowhere else; Woinarski et al. 2006), and many plants and animals of outstanding biogeographic and scientific interest. It harbours an unusually high number (at least 32) of threatened species, many of which are being detrimentally affected by the fire regimes currently prevailing in the region. The Arnhem Land plateau also supports a high proportion of the NT’s rainforest estate, including almost all of the distinctive rainforest associations dominated by the endemic tree Allosyncarpia ternata. The rugged nature of this bioregion affords its biota some protection from threatening processes that have affected biodiversity elsewhere.
FF Anomis involuta
Sandstone Country
FF
The plateau of western Arnhem Land is the most significant region in the NT for biodiversity. It contains far more of the NT’s endemic species than anywhere else (including at least 160 plant species found nowhere else; Woinarski et al. 2006), and many plants and animals of outstanding biogeographic and scientific interest. It harbours an unusually high number (at least 32) of threatened species, many of which are being detrimentally affected by the fire regimes currently prevailing in the region. The Arnhem Land plateau also supports a high proportion of the NT’s rainforest estate, including almost all of the distinctive rainforest associations dominated by the endemic tree Allosyncarpia ternata. The rugged nature of this bioregion affords its biota some protection from threatening processes that have affected biodiversity elsewhere.
FF Anomis involuta
Sandstone Country
FF
FF Australian Woolly Bears ANTHELIDAE sp
Sandstone Country FF
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