Author:
Fensham R. J.,McCosker J. C.,Cox M. J.
Abstract
Preferential clearance of productive Acacia-dominated
ecosystems was determined using digital land-system mapping and a
1994–1995 native vegetation remnant coverage from central Queensland.
The previously mapped land systems are composed of complexes of land units,
covering a range of productive potentials that are not individually mapped but
defined according to their proportions within the land systems. Some land
units were grouped into 11
‘Acacia ecosystems’ composed of unique
combinations of geology and vegetation dominated by brigalow
(Acacia harpophylla F.Muell. ex Benth.), gidgee
(A. cambagei R.T.Baker) or blackwood
(A. argyrodendron Domin). Calculation of the remnant
area of these Acacia ecosystems, assuming equal
proportions of vegetation clearance of the land unit components within the
land-system complexes (equal proportion calculation), was compared with a more
accurate calculation based on interpretation of aerial photography
(aerial-photograph calculation) data. The aerial photograph calculation of
remnant area was 44% of the equal proportion calculation for brigalow
on Tertiary clay and the ratio between these calculations was greater than
100% for only one Acacia ecosystem of relatively
low production potential. The proportion of the remnant
Acacia ecosystems relative to less productive ecosystems
on tenures assigned to production (leasehold and freehold) was consistently
lower than on other tenures. The use of mapping consisting of composite
ecosystems with various production potentials for area-based assessment of
vegetation clearance will overestimate the remnant areas of the relatively
productive types unless a procedure such as that outlined here is used to
correct for preferential clearance. This study provides near-complete and
accurate data on the 1994–1995 status of Acacia
ecosystems in central Queensland. Relative to their original area, values
ranged from 6.8% for brigalow on Tertiary clay to 37.6% for
gidgee–blackwood on alluvium.
Subject
Plant Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
25 articles.
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