Landscapes without boundaries: wildlife and their environments in northern Australia
J. C. Z. Woinarski A B , R. J. Williams B C , O. Price A B and B. Rankmore A DA Parks and Wildlife Commission of the Northern Territory, PO Box 496, Palmerston, NT 0831, Australia.
B Tropical Savannas Cooperative Research Centre, Northern Territory University, Darwin, NT 0909, Australia.
C CSIRO Sustainable Ecosystems, PMB 44 Winnellie, NT 0821, Australia.
D Key Centre for Tropical Wildlife Management, Northern Territory University, Darwin, NT 0909, Australia.
Wildlife Research 32(5) 377-388 https://doi.org/10.1071/WR03008
Submitted: 23 January 2003 Accepted: 23 December 2003 Published: 8 August 2005
Abstract
This paper provides an introduction to the ecological fabric of northern Australia, described here as being a land characterised by extreme climatic seasonality and largely devoid of marked topographic features. Largely as a result of the latter trait, many species have extensive geographic ranges, and the spatial turnover in species composition is extremely limited. Somewhat counter-intuitively, these two traits can be accommodated by organisms only through reliance on critical, but often subtle, landscape variation. We present some preliminary models for Gouldian finch (Erythrura gouldiae) and black-footed tree-rat (Mesembriomys gouldii) to illustrate patterns of variation in their resource availability, and the consequences of such variation. We discuss briefly some studies that have attempted to integrate, or at least consider, these elements.
Acknowledgments
We appreciate the interest of Peter Whitehead and Jeremy Russell-Smith in inviting this contribution. The ideas discussed here owe much to a long collaboration involving them and many other Darwin-based ecologists. For information from unpublished studies, we are grateful to Garry Cook, Alaric Fisher and Christine Bach. Maps were produced by Greg Connors and Craig Hempel. Comments from Stephen Garnett and an anonymous referee were most helpful.
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