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Forests and woodlands

Bloodwood

Bloodwoods over annual and perennial grasses in Kakadu National Park

Most Australian savannas are eucalypt open forests and woodlands, but they vary considerably because of variation in annual rainfall and soil texture. Broadleaf trees and shrubs such as Terminalia (billy goat plum), Brachychiton (kurrajong) and Erythrophleum (ironwood) may also occur together with the eucalypts in both the wetter and drier savannas. In the higher rainfall areas on the lighter textured soils, open forest is typically dominated by eucalypts 10–20 m tall with a canopy cover of 40–60%. The understorey consists of annual or perennial tall grasses. In the Kimberley, Top End and Cape York, such forests are dominated by Eucalyptus tetrodonta (stringybark) and E. miniata (woollybutt); open Melaleuca forests and some patches of monsoonal vine forest fringe the treeless flood plains. Heaths, with a few trees, and hummock grasses (spinifex) grow on the ‘stone country’.

In the semi-arid regions, the savannas are woodlands and open woodlands. The eucalypts are shorter (5–15 m tall) and have lower cover (5–30%) than those of the forests. There are numerous species that dominate, but common ones in north-western Australia are bloodwoods and boxes, e.g. E. tectifica (grey box), E. pruinosa (sliver box) and Corymbia terminalis (bloodwood). Common species in north Queensland include the iron-barks and boxes, e.g. E. crebra (narrow-leaved ironbark), E. melanophloia (silver-leaved ironbark) E. brownii (Reid River box), and bloodwoods, e.g. Corymbia erythrophloia (red bloodwood). Perennial grasses here include kangaroo grass ( Themeda triandra ), black spear grass ( Heteropogon contortus ), ribbongrass( Chrysopogon fallax ) and white grass ( Sehima nervosum ) on the lighter textured soils. On the poorest and most shallow soils in the lower rainfall areas, tree cover is sparse (1–2%) and spinifex ( Triodia spp.) predominates. 

BOABS

Open woodland of boabs over ribbon grass

Some Acacia -dominated woodlands provide the exception to the rule of eucalypt predominance in northern Australia. Notable examples were the extensive areas of brigalow open forest ( Acaciaharpophylla ) on clay soils in eastern Queensland, large areas of which have been cleared and sown with pasture grasses such as buffel ( Cenchrus ciliaris ) and Rhodes ( Chloris gayana ); lancewood (A. shirleyi ) on lateritic soils of the\ Sturt Plateau in the Northern Territory, and pindan ( A. eriopoda and A. tumida ) on sandy soils in the Dampierland region of Western Australia. Woodlands and open woodlands dominated by gidgee ( A. cambagei and A. georginae ) also occupy substantial areas of fine-textured soils in central and western Queensland.

The grassy understoreys also vary with rainfall and soil. Annual sorghums (also often called ‘speargrass’ ) are common beneath the eucalypt woodlands and open forests of the wetter areas of the western Top End of the Northern Territory and parts of the Kimberley. In eastern Arnhem Land and Cape York, in contrast, annual Sorghum intrans is uncommon, and perennial Sorghum (S. plumosum), firegrass (Schizachyrium fragile) and other tall grasses predominate.

In the semi-arid savannas, perennial grasses predominate, with common species being ribbongrass, white grass, kangaroo grass and black speargrass. Black speargrass communities occur on free-draining duplex soils (sand over clay), and cover a huge area of eastern Queensland. As rainfall declines westward in north Queensland, Aristida , Bothriochloa and Chrysopogon spp. begin to dominate. In the driest savannas of northern Australia, where soils are skeletal, the grass layer is dominated by ‘spinifex’, under either open eucalypt woodland or mulga (Acacia aneura). Unlike other perennial grasses, which have a tussock growth form, spinifex has a hummock growth form.