Hopefully I said that without
slurring it too much with the
Central West Local Land
Services, and she's based in
Grenfell.
She's going to go over tonight
some of the funding that's
coming up and why it's important
to protect some of these
remnants that are in our neck of
the woods.
And then we're going to hear
from Dan Clarke.
Dan's a botanical consultant
with Arcane Botanica, and he's
going to tell us some of the
cool species that you generally
find in these little remnants so
that you can go out after this
webinar and have a look in your
own backyard and see if you've
got any of this stuff on your
own property.
So without further ado, thank
you Caitlin from Dubbo and Tessa
from Dripstone and Kyra from
Nyngan and everybody else.
And I'll hand over to Bec to get
us started.
Thanks very much, Danielle.
OK, so hi everyone.
So this evening I'll I'll be
presenting a short introduction
on the Threatened Ecological
Communities on Farms project.
Before I start, I'd like to
acknowledge that I'm recording
the webinar from the lands of
the Wiradjuri people.
I also acknowledge the
traditional custodians of the
various lands on which you all
join us from this evening and
any Aboriginal or Torres Strait
Islander people participating in
this webinar.
I pay my respects to Elders
past, present and emerging and
celebrate the diversity of
Aboriginal people and their
ongoing cultures and connections
to the lands and waters of NSW.
So just a little bit of webinar
etiquette before we go too much
further.
Questions about what you have
learnt in the presentations are
encouraged this evening, so
please place questions in the
chat during this webinar.
We'll have 10 minutes to go
through a selection of your
questions following Dan's
presentation.
You're welcome to react during
the webinar.
So likes, applause and all of
those emojis are welcome.
From now until question time I'd
like to ask for you all, accept
our presenters to mute your
microphones please and slide
your video feed to the off
position. Just in case anyone's
having trouble with their
Internet.
OK, so the Threatened Ecological
Communities on Farms project is
funded by the Australian
Government's National Heritage
Trust and is being delivered by
the Central West Local Land
Services.
The aim of the project is to
support farmers and public land
managers to implement management
practises that will improve the
condition of the Box Gum Grassy
Woodlands and Grey Box Grassy
Woodlands plus provide
production benefits.
So in the Central West Local
Land Services region, native
vegetation has been subject to
several extensive clearing
events following settlement in
the 1830s.
In this region, the ecological
communities of Box Gum Grassy
Woodland and Grey Box Grassy
Woodland are listed nationally
as endangered.
Respectively, only 5% and 10% of
their pre settlement extent now
remain as remnant patches across
the region.
Implementing a few key
management practises is the best
way to help protect, restore and
extend our threatened ecological
communities.
The project will include an
annual invite to land holders in
target areas with either or both
of the
Box Gum Grassy Woodland or Grey
Box Grassy Woodland to express
an interest in funding. The
grants will provide assistance
for a variety of management
practises including weed control
to reduce competition for native
species, fencing to protect
remnants from the impact of
livestock and to reduce grazing
pressure by pest animals and
native wildlife.
Controlling pests including
particularly pigs, rabbits, cats
and foxes.
Supplementary planting to
improve diversity of existing
remnants or improve the
connectivity between remnant
woodland patches.
Also looking after habitat by
retaining and installing homes
for wildlife.
Also so this might include
leaving fallen logs, rocks and
dead standing trees within the
remnant patches and in doing so
providing shelter and places to
hide for native animals.
Alternatively, reintroducing
habitat features by installing
nest boxes or augmenting tree
hollows in existing trees.
So the project's first year of
Landholder incentives 24/25 will
focus on farms between
Wellington and Dubbo.
Landholder grants will be rolled
out in other target areas until
2027/2028, which is the
project's fifth and final year.
So aside from managing grazing,
pressure, weed and pest, animal
control, revegetation of habitat
and encouraging habitat for
wildlife, there are several
other activities that will be
delivered as part of the
project.
So these include the development
of skills and knowledge of our
landholders, community members
and stakeholders through
engagement and training
activities, awareness raising
about threatened ecological
communities through the
provision of educational
resources, the creation of short
films, and visibility on social
and mainstream media.
Demonstration of the importance
of cool burns through cultural
burning activities in years 3
and 5 will also happen.
Extensive floral flora surveys
to monitor change following
implementation of the key
management practises.
And last but by no means least,
continuation of the annual
monitoring of 33 floral survey
plots set up in 2010 at our
original population locations of
the Small Purple Pea.
So the long term monitoring of
the endangered Small Purple Pea,
which was once found throughout
central NSW and parts of
Victoria, is important in
determining if the density of
the population is declining,
stable or slowly increasing, and
what environmental or biological
factors may be preventing its
recovery.
Here's just a few links for you
to help find out more.
And now I'd like to pass you
over to Dan Clarke for his
presentation on the importance
of our threatened ecological
communities and their amazing
floral gems.
So thank you, Dan.
I'll, I'll dive straight in
because I am worried about
running out of time that that's
a bad way for a presenter to
start.
But we'll see how we go.
But I'm really glad to be with
you tonight.
I'm on Dharawal land tonight in
the Sydney area, so I pay my
respects as well to the eldest
past and present on Dharawal
Country in Sutherland Shire in
Sydney.
Yeah, diving straight in here.
I just had this slide from
another presentation just in
case you are not completely
familiar and I just wanted to
throw it in in case very
quickly.
You might have been familiar
with the Threatened Species
Conservation Acts 1995.
It took that long for us to have
something where threaten
entities could be listed and
protected and I guess
recognised.
But just if you weren't aware,
that act has now gone along with
that nightmare Native Vegetation
Act that farmers used to wrestle
with.
And we've now got a Biodiversity
Conservation Act, but that
pretty much functions the same
way as what we call the TSC ACT
at the NSW level.
And we've also got an amended
Local Land Services Act running
alongside, which I'm sure Bec
and Danielle and Steven could
tell you more about and are
probably working within the
constraints of.
I do all my work pretty much
within the BC ACT, but at the
Commonwealth level.
And I understand this is a
Commonwealth funded project.
You've got the Environment
Protection and Biodiversity
Conservation Act, which will
also list threatened entities
and pretty much or almost mirror
the Biodiversity Conservation
Acts.
They don't always completely
mirror each other, but by
enlarge if you've got a
threatened species listed in
NSW, it will more than likely be
listed at the Commonwealth
level.
So just if you were on holidays
in 2016 and you haven't caught
up and we've had COVID and all
that sort of thing, they're the
main acts we're running with now
at NSW and then at the
Commonwealth level.
So you're probably familiar that
that these acts have the power
to list threaten flora, fauna
and fungi.
Now I like this new little
paradigm here.
We've always talked about flora
and fauna, but we're now told it
should have been three F's and
not two.
We've now got fungi thrown in
that are in their own group and
there is one example, at least
in Sydney, where pretty much a
colony of mushrooms growing in
bushland is now listed as a
threatened ecological community,
which is quite interesting and
we might see more of that as we
go forward.
But we have species whether
the're animal, plant populations
as well as ecological
communities and that's what
we're focusing on tonight.
Just note that they're all
recognised as being threatened
and then they can be categorised
as vulnerable, endangered or
critically endangered.
I've just been to a lot of, I
guess environmental meetings and
a bit of protest where a lot of
these terms get interchanged and
get confused, but they're all
threatened with extinction and
then they're just given one of
those 3 categories.
If we go beyond critically
endangered, we're in the realms
of presumed extinct and none of
us really want to go there with
anything we've got.
So Bec mentioned this one, the
Swainsona recta.
This is a threatened plant in
your part of the world, the
Small Purple Pea.
It's got the category of
endangered, both at the State
and the Commonwealth level.
Sometimes those categories can
differ, but you know, it can be
vulnerable at 1 and endangered
at the other.
But again, I think they're
trying to be a bit more
consistent with each other.
And this is endangered.
Beautiful plant.
We saw this last week.
Stephen took me to see this one
as part of the workshop.
But our focus tonight is the
Threatened Ecological
Communities.
And just in case you're not
familiar, it's where we are
taking the whole vegetation
community as a whole, a unique
assemblage of species that
occurred together in a certain
part of the world and are now,
yeah, like Bec said, being
cleared to a lot of the time to
within an inch of their life
sort of thing.
So we're taking in the canopy,
the shrub layer, which in this
photo is more or less absent,
and the ground layer as well.
And one of the ones we're
focusing on has this mouthful of
a name, which is called White
Box, Yellow Box, Blakely's Red
Gum, Grassy Woodlands and
Derived Native Grasslands.
That's the first TEC.
This would be the most prominent
TEC on the tablelands and I'd
say that, you know, part of the
Western Slopes, it's sort of the
forerunner, one of the flagship
TECs that is pretty much the
well known.
Just in case you're wondering,
you know, the government isn't
picking on your part of the
world.
You know, this all started in
the Sydney area and it's
radiated out from there.
It's getting to the point now in
Sydney if you walk into any
patch of bushland, it's pretty
much going to be a TEC.
So we've got about 30 TECs in
Sydney and it's radiated out
into all of NSW and now they're
recognised everywhere.
I think we're over about now 100
Threatened Ecological
Communities in NSW.
I believe this one is now
critically endangered.
The Commonwealth and the state
have pushed it to that brink.
So that's a bit of a red light
for everybody.
That's it's on the fertile
country.
It's normally in the valleys and
on the Creek lines.
It's been on the fertile
farmlands, and we can understand
it's been on the productive
lands.
It's not really up the rocky
slopes and the ridges and it's
very common on the tablelands
parts of NSW, but I'd say it
sort of gets into the more
eastern parts of the western
slopes, if that makes sense.
So we're treating the whole
community as a whole. Trees,
mid-storey, ground layer.
We think about the habitat that
use it, the microbes in the
soil, it it involves the soil
underneath as well.
And if we're going to quantify,
we'll measure it in square
metres or hectares.
It's the whole vegetation
community.
I just threw in some typical
species that you can find in the
White box/Yellow box community.
I want to show some of these in
that order.
They're three eucalypts that
they're referring to, and that's
Eucalyptus albens, melliodora
and blakelyi.
And generally you got to have
those plants making up the
community, just some mid-storey
species or might be called the
shrub layer.
We can have a lot of wattles
like dealbata, we can have
Kurrajongs (Brachychiton) you
can put a lot in there.
But these are just some typical
ones that we find.
And in the ground layer you can
have a whole range of things.
Grasses as it's called, a Grassy
Woodland and a lot of herbs and
forbes aswell.
There's a hell of a lot of
diversity in the ground layer.
And in most vegetation
communities, 90% of the
diversity will be in the ground
layer.
Just note it's got a clause here
it says and Derive Native
Grasslands.
And in ecology we'll call that
DNG.
If the trees have been cleared
and the shrub layer has been
cleared and we're pretty much
left with a bit of a paddock or
grassland type environment.
If a lot of that is made up of
native grasslands and forbes,
the community can still be
recognised in a modified form as
Derived Native Grasslands.
And that requires in my line of
work, ecological assessment and
things like that.
But you can have a modified form
of the community and, and that's
a Derived Native Grassland where
the ground layer is still pretty
much there.
This is the Grey Box.
The second one, Grey Box Grassy
Woodlands, and it's still got
that Derived Native Grasslands
clause in there or modification,
of Southeastern Australia that's
endangered.
I would say this one is more
common into the western slopes
and I guess the western part of
the western slopes.
This is around Parkes where this
beautiful tree, Eucalyptus
microcarpa kicks in.
It's called a Grey Box.
They're quite easy to identify
most of the time.
We saw a lot of them around
Parkes the other day, just a
little bit different to the
three trees that dominate the
Grassy Box Woodlands, but I'll,
I'll go into those as well.
But normally it's on the Penny
Plain country.
The ground layer can be similar,
though.
There's a lot of western species
kicking in which you don't get
on the tablelands, but that's
the second TEC
We're focusing on tonight.
Just want to show you what's
online that you can get.
There's a whole heap of
literature I've put.
I'm happy for this PowerPoint to
be available.
There's some links there.
You can download documents like
this and have a really good
read.
You can even get a species list
on the next page.
And I'm just showing some of
these tonight.
This is the Grassy Box
Woodlands.
There's some really good info
there that you can have a good
read on.
That's the Grey Box (Microcarpa)
Woodlands.
We can still get Eucalyptus
melliodora, that's the Yellow
Box.
But normally you get a dominance
of microcarpa.
We get a bit more Callitris pine
than we would in the White Box /
Yellow Box country.
And you can also get a tree
called Bimble Box, which I think
is a pretty easily identifiable
Eucalyptus with it's green
rounded leaves.
That's called Poplar Box.
That one there, the ground
layer, you just get in a few
more western species coming in
and a bit of a different
dominance.
But the ground layer between the
two TECs, they share a lot of
species.
There's a lot of crossover.
A lot of these ground layer
species have massive ranges and
there's just a lot of crossover
and a lot of commonality.
Some of the mid-storey will be
different, like Acacia deanei,
which is a bit more of a western
species and Acacia decora.
We saw those around Parkes and
Wellington very easily last
week.
Still got Kurrajong and some
really common mid- storey
species like that.
But they're just a few of the
the common ones there.
Just the importance of TECs, you
know, a lot of typical things
about keeping bushland on sites.
We argue they're, they're unique
assemblages of species that that
form the natural vegetation of
the landscape.
You know, those things have been
here for thousands of years and,
and we tend to knock them over
really quickly.
They're essential for habitat
for local wildlife.
That includes vertebrates.
It includes insects, which we're
getting more and more worried
about these days, microbes in
the soil, all that sort of
thing.
All the fungi that live in the
soil as well.
Will, you know, will ecologists
will argue they're good for
soil, soil stability, nutrient
recycling.
They're reducing water runoff.
They're part of the water
cycling and that sort of thing.
Water has been pumped up through
the trees, been evaporated off.
Very important for holding soil
moisture.
We're worried about carbon these
days.
We believe that vegetation
sequests carbon and when it gets
degraded or knocked over, you
just get carbon dioxide plumes
being released.
And they'll provide shade for
wildlife, livestock.
They'll also, you know, reduce
the heat sink event or heat sink
effect, I should say, on the
ground.
And one of the things that
government will look at, and I
think Bec and Danielle and
Stephen will sort of look at is
how patches connect to each
other for the purposes of
regeneration and rehabilitation.
And more and more we're looking
at the landscape in terms of
connectivity and stepping stones
of patches, you know, between
patches, allowing fauna to move
between those patches.
So look, I just took a random
shot here from east of Parkes
and I didn't mean to pick on
anyone's property or anything
like that.
It's, it's just a random Google
map shot.
But I don't know what the land
use is here.
But we can see what we might
call some pretty intact or what
look to be intact patches of
vegetation, even though we can
see some fragmentation between.
But if a person wanted to do
some restoration here, for
example, then that might be
pretty appeasing for funding and
things like that in order to
enhance vegetation and and form
more connection between patches.
If someone wanted to do some
planting of trees, say along
there and it like for example,
if koalas were in this habitat,
they could move from this patch
and might be able to move more
safely to this patch.
So government are looking to to
do a lot of what we call
wildlife corridors and
connectivity rather than say
plants, 1000 trees here and try
and get some funding for it.
It'd be sort of more favourable
to possibly do that here and
relieve the fragmentation of
these patches and just provide
some more connectivity.
And that's one thing that that
government is sort of strongly
looking at.
There's a lot of ecological
research that goes into
connectivity and stepping stones
and, and sort of the, the
processes of fragmentation.
So I just got this off the web
the other night.
It's it's in the North East of
NSW, But they've gone to efforts
here to, to put in, I guess,
belts of trees to connect one
patch to the other.
And it's a bit of an example of
how people are trying to connect
patches up just these lines of
trees where animals might move
through, birds might move
through and koalas might move
through and and other fauna as
well.
And it's just one important
aspects.
When a patch sort of gets
fragmented like this and it has
a big edge ratio on the ends,
ecologists do detect a decrease
in ecological function.
You get less mammals coming in,
you get less insects coming in,
you get plant species dropping
out, you get other plant species
taking over.
It's subject to edge effects.
You get more weed invasion and
the ecological function of this
patch will decrease over time.
And sometimes it's really
obvious as an ecologist when you
walk into it, you just see a
lack of diversity.
So it's we're trying to sort of,
I guess, stitch these two
together and and create more
intact patches.
So now I'm moving on to the
floral gems and hope I can get
through these.
This is Eucalyptus albens, which
is one of the trees of the
Grassy Box Woodland TEC called
the White Box.
Box trees or box eucalyptus
normally have this finely
tessellated bark in a bit of a
jigsaw pattern and when you go
halfway up the tree it'll go to
smooth bark and you might get
the odd ribbon or so hanging
down in a lot of box trees.
So finally tessellated smooth up
the top where the branches come
out.
Eucalyptus Albums has these nice
generous buds and they normally
have a bit of a waxy hue on
them.
It's a very common tree on the
tablelands and slopes of NSW,
nice big flowers and the leaves
will have a bluey green look to
them.
The ones we saw at Mount Arthur
last week, the leaves are pretty
much blue.
They've just got a large hint of
blue in them and they're up sort
of that end of the spectrum.
And if you're looking at a box
eucalypt, they tend to have
fruits like this where they've
just got a deeply inserted discs
there.
And the best way to describe
them is a champagne glass or I
call them a wedding champagne
glass, you know, probably
doesn't need that on it.
But if you think of a wedding
champagne glass, these are a
really good example.
And they're on the large side
for boxes on the large side of
the scale.
This is Yellow Box, the famous
Eucalyptus meliodora.
It would be the, I would say the
most common tree.
If you take the tablelands and
the western slopes combined,
it's probably, it would be in
the top three most numerous
trees, even though a lot of its
habitat has been cleared.
But the're a favourite one with
beekeepers, their fruit is a bit
more or their gum nut, if you
like.
It's a bit more of a cup shape,
not so much of a champagne
glass, but you get in the same
sort of shape there.
They flower very prolifically.
Their leaves tend to be a bit
narrower than the White Box.
They tend to be a lot narrower
and sometimes they're a lot
shorter with a bit of an
elliptic shape, still bluey
green, a bit more maybe green
than those of albens, but they
do vary a bit, blue, green to
green.
And again, the bark will go up
to the lower branches there and
then it will go smooth for the
rest of that.
But if you look at a Yellow Box
trunk, and we did see this last
week, the bark will sort of S
spend up the tree.
I'm exaggerating it a bit, but
it will sinuate as it goes up
the tree.
You can see these sort of S
spends in the bark and it's a
bit of a good feature for
melliodora.
It's not there all the time, but
it's there a lot of the time.
So look out for that.
It's a dominant one in Grassy
Box Woodland.
It can be in the Grey Box
Woodland as well.
It's got a big range.
This is Eucalyptus microcarpa.
It's got a trunk like Eucalyptus
albens, but it's a lot darker.
It's normally darker brown and
not that sort of pale grey that
we saw a bit darker.
And the thing about the leaves,
which I haven't shown, but the
leaves are green.
They're a nice green colour most
of the time, the same tone of
green on both sides.
They can be a little bit bluey
green, but they're they're down
the green ends of the spectrum,
buds like melliodora.
And they've sort of got fruit
like melliodora or the Yellow
Box as well.
But their microcarpa sort of
means small fruit.
So they'll be on the small side
and they're a lot smaller than
Eucalyptus Albens.
And I'm just ignoring all the
integrates here 'cause that just
gets complicated.
But another typical box fruit.
Look for them if you're around
Parkes and that sort of area,
going west to Griffith and north
as well.
From there.
They're a really common tree,
even on the side of the road as
you drive along.
I just got asked to throw this
one in Eucalyptus conica, the
Fuzzy Box.
We saw these around parks last
week and I had to get more
familiar with them.
They're a bit of a vague 1 to
me, but they've got more of a
messy bark down the bottom, very
fibrous and chunky.
They've got a canopy like
Eucalyptus albens and that's
what we thought they were, but
they were just looking a bit
different.
But it's a very common tree.
Again, it's probably part of the
Grey Box.
Woodland TEC and Danielle just
mentioned micro bats and I, I
got asked to do a, a bit of a
cross promotion here.
You can get these guys getting
under the bark of these trees.
So happily get under the bark
and sit under there.
So they're good habitat trees
for that sort of thing.
We have a lot of microbat
species in NSW.
They are not usually insect
eaters.
We have some threatened species,
we have some common ones, and we
have some threatened ones.
And these are the only time I've
helped an ecologist do some
microbat trapping and I managed
to get those photos.
They're tiny.
I mean, that thing sort of
doesn't look that small, but
then you look at his finger and
you can see how sort of tiny it
is.
These are trapped at night and
then they're released on the
following night once they're
identified.
This was around Gunnedah where
we did a site and I think he
caught about 50 microbats during
the night.
They they can whip over your
head at dusk.
Sometimes you just think it's a
moth going over your head, but a
lot of the time it's these guys.
They'll live in a tree hollow,
they'll live under the bark and
they can live under a concrete
bridge on a main road or a, or a
minor Rd.
If it's got little recesses
under the concrete, sometimes
there's holes under there and
they can live in those.
So we get worried about these
guys as well.
And just remember they're
relatives, the flying foxes.
We get told by flying fox
experts that they do most of the
pollinating.
So they will fly up to 100
kilometres every night
pollinating eucalyptus trees.
So they're, they're reported to
be the main pollinator.
So these guys will go for the
insects, but the flying foxes
will go for the eucalypts and
the fruit. Tree hollows in
Ecology,
Now we're very concerned about
these hollow bearing trees.
I only photographed these two
Yellow Boxes on a farm in
Goulburn a couple of weeks ago.
But you could, yeah, they're
pretty decrepit and pretty
isolated, but you can see the
hollows that are in them.
This one's full of hollows here.
And if you take time to have a
look, they're full of parrots.
They can have possums in them.
You can see a bird of prey using
them or you can get bees or you
can probably get microbats as
well.
So these take decades to form.
In a place like Sydney,
we're just losing them all.
They're a non renewable resource
because they take so long to
form.
So we're really worried about
those too
When a when you know a person
who wants to do some
environmental conservation when
they've got hollow bearing
trees, we're really happy to see
that and we try and encourage
them to keep them and just keep
the tree for as long as possible
to keep those hollows in there.
I'll move into the mid-storey.
This is Acacia decora
It's a very common one in the
grey box woodland Tec.
As you get a bit further West,
this will grow on the side of
the road.
We saw it easily last week.
It wasn't flowering
unfortunately it had just
finished.
But this is a beautiful wattle
on the western slopes, easily
identifiable most of the time,
doesn't grow very tall.
Often it's on the side of the
road at about a metre tall or
two metres, and it's probably
one you can get familiar with.
So if you've got a lot of this
on your property and a bit of
Eucalyptus microcarpa, well, you
might have, you know, the Grey
Box Woodland TEC, even if it's
in a modified form.
This one is more from the Grassy
Box Woodland a bit further east,
it sort of dropped out when I
got to Parkes, but this is
Acacia dealbata, the Silver
Wattle.
It's a beautiful one in the
Grassy Box Woodland, especially
around Bathurst, and Orange.
Flowers profusely.
The leaves have a really blue
silvery hue to them and further
west at Parkes in Wellington
there's a really similar species
called deanii that doesn't
flower as prolifically, but it's
still a nice and common one.
The leaves are a bit more green
and a bit more spaced out on
deanii, and on dealbata
they're a nice silvery blue and
a bit, well, silvery green blue
and compact.
But two beautiful wattles,
dealbata and deanii, that are
part of these TECs.
We saw this last week, a
beautiful Swainsona
This one isn't threatened, but
it's a common one.
But this is a pea.
These pea flowering plants are
great for attracting insects.
They're part of both TECs and we
saw one in full flower last week
and I'm so glad Bec took a
photo.
Really common plant and just an
example of a pea flower, that's
a big family related to the
wattles, which the insects
really go for.
This is a Hop Bush, a Dodonaea.
The flowers aren't that
spectacular, but it's the female
fruit that are really sort of
showy.
And these will be eaten by a
whole heap of parrots, including
rare ones as well
I'm told. The leaves are
sticky.
It's a very, very common shrub,
like out in this part of the
world and it's even on the coast
of NSW too, but very common.
It's a part of both TECs
It's a beautiful plant to have
around just for the fruit.
There's male and female plants
and this is a female plant that
bears seed.
But these beautiful papery
capsules, they're a really
important habitat resource.
Just moving to the ground layer
now and finishing off with about
six or seven species to go look,
I apologise for this.
Some of these are my garden
photos, but I'm sure you get the
the gist.
This plant grows all over NSW
with sort of a variety of forms.
It'll be in your part of the
world, it'll be in both of the
TECs
The only difference is the
foliage might be more blue.
It might be a more blue type of
foliage and not so green.
But have a look in your patches,
see if you can see this one.
Especially in spring and summer,
it does flower very readily.
You've got another Daisy here
called the Sticky Everlasting.
This is Xerochrysum viscosum.
We saw this in in large numbers
at the workshops last week.
Whether it was Wellington or
Parkes, this guy was everywhere.
Pretty easy to identify.
It's a common plant.
It's part of both of the TECs
and it'd be very common even on
the edges of farm paddocks where
there's a bit of woodland.
Just another Pea, a scrambler,
this one's got a lot smaller.
peas than the Swansona, this one
is called a Glyine, a very
useful plant for the ground
layer that I guess provides
nitrogen in the soil.
It's a very widespread species
across NSW.
Look for that one.
It it just means you got a bit
of native herb forb sort of
layer in the ground layer.
It can climb up other shrubs,
but it's pretty, it's pretty
weak and pretty dainty, but it's
another pea scrambler.
The grasses are very important
in your two TECs, obviously the
Grassy Box and the Grey Box.
This is Themeda, Kangaroo Grass,
it's just one of the easiest
grasses to identify.
It's not the most prolific grass
in these two TECs, but it is out
there and you do get patches of
it.
And with these kangaroo like,
paw like florets, I guess the
seeds are inside with these long
black horns coming out, when
it's in seeding time.
And it's just an easy grass to
identify.
And it's very ecologically
important for a lot of
communities as well.
It will be there in the TECs in
patches.
I just find it's not one of the
strongest grasses.
This one is a strong one.
If you're familiar with this,
this is Austrostipa scabra, part
of both TECs.
It'll be more common in the Grey
Box.
It's got these beautiful golden
heads that blow in the winds and
you can get patches of it like
this and it makes it easily
identifiable.
It does look like some weedy
grasses, but if you get familiar
with it quickly enough, you
should be able to pick it.
It's a very common and easy one
that when we learn plants out in
in this part of the world on the
western slopes, it's one we
learned very quickly.
It's just it's golden seed heads
and they're raspy stems at the
bottom that make it easily
identifiable.
It's a good grass to have in
large patches.
You might see this, a Bulbine
Lily, my garden again, but they
can look like this out in the
bush if you get the right patch.
These beautiful star shaped
yellow flowers.
It's related to leeks and onions
and plants in that group.
They can flower for most of the
year.
Sometimes they like a moist
spot.
We did see them at the Mount
Arthur picnic area at
Wellington.
It might have been a different
species, but the flowers look
pretty much the same, beautiful
yellow, easy to identify.
I can't think of any weeds that
you'll get that'll sort of look
like that.
Great plan to have.
And it's part of both of the
TECs
It's one of the showy species,
likes a bit of moisture.
Danielle sent me these ones and
we did see this last week.
This is Stackhousia monogyna.
It's called creamy candles.
This is a beautiful plant.
And we did see these in Mount
Arthur.
They've got 5 petal flowers come
up in a real showy spike like
this.
And if these are hanging around
in the ground layer on your
property or your, your favourite
bushland patch, it shows that
the ground layers in in not too
bad a condition.
If these sort of things are
hanging in there, they can they,
you can just get sort of
colonies of them through the
ground layer and they're quite
beautiful.
Just two more to go.
This is, well, this is a plan
I'm familiar with, but I, I
won't go into that.
This is called a Ajuga
australis.
We saw a lot of this amount
Wellington and it piqued a lot
of interest.
It's actually related to all
those culinary herbs like mince
and oregano and lavender.
But the leaves don't really
smell in, in this particular
native one.
But it's a nice plant.
It's got nice purple flowers.
It'll sort of grow stems to 30
centimetres tall.
Doesn't show up everywhere, but
it shows up in a few patches.
And again, if you've got this in
your ground layer, it, it sort
of shows that that the ground
layer would, would sort of be
moderately intact or, or mostly
intact.
It's a very interesting
Australian species.
It looks very different from
place to place.
And they'll probably break it up
into multiple species sooner or
later, but it's part of both
TECs.
This thing grows right across
NSW, quite commonly.
And we snapped an orchid just at
the ends.
This is Caladenia tentaculata.
This was generating a lot of
interest last week.
It's a real funky orchid.
It's called Fringe Spider Orchid
and there's a few Caladenias
with this sort of shape, but Bec
just got this last week.
If you have orchids in your
ground layer again, it shows
that the ground layer is in
pretty good nick or all the
essentials are there for orchids
to be able to grow.
It's hard to find orchids a lot
of the time in degraded
landscapes.
So if these are hanging in there
and they are listed in both
TECs, I've seen this in Grassy
Box Woodland around Bathurst,
beautiful plant.
And so if, if you're getting
orchids in your patch, that's
really good evidence that
there's a lot of resilience
there.
And I'd be documenting them as
best you can, documenting what
orchids that you're getting,
because there are a few rare
ones out there.
And it just demonstrates the
good nature of that ground
layer.
So don't forget that handout.
I've just thrown it in there at
the end.
That's the Local Land Services
handout that's also on the
website.
And I'm more than happy to hang
around and answer any questions
for as long as you want until
Bec or Danielle shut the door on
us.
Yeah, that was excellent.
Thank you so much, Dan.
Fantastic.