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Journal of the Australian Rangeland Society
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Clearing savannas for use as rangelands in Queensland: altered landscapes and water-erosion processes

J. Ludwig and D. Tongway

The Rangeland Journal 24(1) 83 - 95
Published: 15 June 2002

Abstract

This paper presents a framework and some examples of how tree clearing alters landscapes (vegetation structure and faunal habitat) and processes (run-off and soil erosion) for eucalypt savannas in Queensland. Unaltered savannas have a tree-layer and a well-covered ground-layer of perennial grasses, and they provide habitats favoured by a variety of open woodland birds, reptiles and small mammals. Because unaltered savannas have a high ground-cover, they have low rates of run-off and erosion. When savannas are chained, but otherwise unaltered, trees rapidly regrow and increase in canopy cover. The exotic buffel grass often establishes in chained regrowth (especially if grazed), although the cover of native grasses such as black speargrass remains high (unless heavily grazed). We found that open woodland birds declined on these chained regrowth sites, except for the Weebill, which increased in abundance. When savannas are cleared of trees and woody debris and developed as improved pasture systems, both exotic and native perennial grass increased in cover. However, open woodland fauna abundance declined whereas grassland fauna such as the Red-backed Fairy-wren and the House Mouse increased in abundance. If these pasture sites are heavily utilised by livestock so that ground-cover is reduced, rates of run-off and soil loss are likely to rapidly increase, especially as cover declines below 40%. These run-off and erosion findings suggest that the manner in which savanna landscapes are cleared and subsequently used will have flow-on effects at catchment scales.

Keywords: erosion, habitat, landscape ecology, run-off, tree clearing, vegetation structure

https://doi.org/10.1071/RJ02004

© ARS 2002

Committee on Publication Ethics


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