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  • Cover

  • Title

  • Copyright

  • Contents

  • Preface

  • Acknowledgements

  • Chapter 1 Introduction and background

    • Why write a book on rocky outcrops?

    • What is a rocky outcrop?

    • Types of rocky outcrops

    • Protected rock formations

    • References

  • Chapter 2 Rocky outcrop values

    • Ecological values

    • Cultural heritage values

    • Economic values

    • References

  • Chapter 3 Australian rock- dwelling fauna

    • Reptiles

    • Frogs

    • Mammals

    • Birds

    • Invertebrates

    • References

  • Chapter 4 Threatening processes

    • Threats in different environments

    • Land clearing and loss of vegetation

    • Overgrazing by domestic livestock and feral herbivores

    • Introduced herbivorous invertebrates

    • Weed invasion

    • Introduced predators

    • Altered fire regimes

    • Physical threats to rocky environments

    • Climate change

    • References

  • Chapter 5 Managing rocky outcrops for biodiversity conservation

    • Managing rocky outcrops in agricultural landscapes

    • Management actions

    • Managing rocky outcrops in state forests and on Crown Land

    • Managing rocky outcrops in National Parks and other protected areas

    • Concluding comments

    • References

  • Appendix 1. Australian rock- dwelling fauna and their conservation status

  • Glossary

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    • C

    • D

    • E

    • F

    • G

    • H

    • I

    • K

    • L

    • M

    • N

    • O

    • P

    • Q

    • R

    • S

    • T

    • V

  • Index

    • A

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    • D

    • E

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    • H

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ECOLOGY, CONSERVATION AND MANAGEMENT DAMIAN MICHAEL AND DAVID LINDENMAYER © Damian Michael and David Lindenmayer 2018 All rights reserved Except under the conditions described in the Australian Copyright Act 1968 and subsequent amendments, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, duplicating or otherwise, without the prior permission of the copyright owner Contact CSIRO Publishing for all permission requests The moral rights of the authors have been asserted National Library of Australia Cataloguing-inPublication entry Michael, Damian, author Rocky outcrops in Australia : ecology, conservation and management / written by Damian Michael and David B Lindenmayer 9781486307906 (paperback) 9781486307913 (epdf) 9781486307920 (epub) Includes bibliographical references and index Outcrops (Geology) – Australia Wildlife conservation – Australia Wildlife management – Australia Agriculture – Environmental aspects – Australia Land use, Rural – Australia – Management Lindenmayer, David, author Published by CSIRO Publishing Locked Bag 10 Clayton South VIC 3169 Australia Telephone: +61 9545 8400 Email: publishing.sales@csiro.au Website: www.publish.csiro.au Front cover: (top) rocky outcrop (photo: Damian Michael); (bottom) Gidgee Skink on a rocky outcrop in eastern and south-western Australia (photo: Jules Farquhar) Back cover: (left to right) Flat Rock Spider (photo: Jordan de Jong); Chattering Rock Frog (top) and Cave Frog (bottom) (photo: Brendan Schembri); Common Rock Rat (photo: Angus McNab) Set in 11/13.5 Adobe Minion Pro and Helvetica Neue LT Std Edited by Anne Findlay, Princes Hill, Melbourne Cover design by Andrew Weatherill Typeset by Desktop Concepts Pty Ltd, Melbourne Index by Bruce Gillespie Printed in China by Toppan Leefung Printing Limited CSIRO Publishing publishes and distributes scientific, technical and health science books, magazines and journals from Australia to a worldwide audience and conducts these activities autonomously from the research activities of the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) The views expressed in this publication are those of the authors and not necessarily represent those of, and should not be attributed to, the publisher or CSIRO The copyright owners shall not be liable for technical or other errors or omissions contained herein The reader/ user accepts all risks and responsibility for losses, damages, costs and other consequences resulting directly or indirectly from using this information Original print edition: The paper this book is printed on is in accordance with the rules of the Forest Stewardship Council ® The FSC® promotes environmentally responsible, socially beneficial and economically viable management of the world’s forests Contents Preface v Acknowledgements vii Chapter Introduction and background Why write a book on rocky outcrops? What is a rocky outcrop? Types of rocky outcrops Protected rock formations 16 References 19 Chapter Rocky outcrop values Ecological values 21 22 Cultural heritage values 35 Economic values 40 References 46 Chapter Australian rock-dwelling fauna 49 Reptiles 50 Frogs 66 Mammals 69 Birds 76 Invertebrates 81 References 85 Chapter Threatening processes 89 Threats in different environments 89 Land clearing and loss of vegetation 91 Overgrazing by domestic livestock and feral herbivores 95 Introduced herbivorous invertebrates 99 Weed invasion 100 iii iv R o c k y O u t c r o p s i n A u s t r a li a Introduced predators 103 Altered fire regimes 104 Physical threats to rocky environments 109 Climate change 115 References 116 Chapter Managing rocky outcrops for biodiversity conservation 119 Managing rocky outcrops in agricultural landscapes 120 Management actions 128 Managing rocky outcrops in state forests and on Crown Land 143 Managing rocky outcrops in National Parks and other protected areas 143 Concluding comments 150 References 152 Appendix Australian rock-dwelling fauna and their conservation status 154 Glossary 160 Index 163 Preface Few places on Earth remain unaffected by human activities Even remote wilderness areas show signs of human practices, and some of these impacts are clearly visible from space As custodians of the planet, one of the greatest challenges in the 21st century is to reduce our footprint on the natural environment, while at the same time accommodating the needs of an increasing human population Better integration of biodiversity conservation in humanmodified landscapes is part of the solution Rocky outcrops are environments where substantial improvements in their management can enhance biodiversity outcomes in landscapes that have been significantly altered by human activities Rocky outcrops are exposures of bedrock that protrude above the Earth’s surface Exposures of rock are found on all continents, in most climate zones and are prominent features of protected wilderness areas as well as landscapes that have been modified by humans Rocky outcrops are considered sacred by Indigenous people, they provide valuable recreational opportunities and are places where people have the opportunity to connect with nature They also have important ecological and socio-economic values, some of which present conflicting management and conservation challenges Rocky outcrops in agricultural landscapes, on Crown Land and in state forests are often degraded and in need of urgent management We trust that the information presented in this book promotes a broader appreciation of the natural history of rocky outcrops in Australia and helps provide guidance on their conservation and management Damian Michael and David Lindenmayer June 2017 v This page intentionally left blank Acknowledgements Damian Michael would like to thank Richard and Janet Michael for fostering his interest in the great outdoors, Tracy Michael for her support and Asha and Amber for their constant inspiration David Lindenmayer would like to thank his family for the support over the past 35 years of his research work Various organisations and agencies have supported this research, including the Australian Research Council, Ian Potter Foundation, Vincent Fairfax Family Foundation, Goulburn Broken Catchment Management Authority, North East Catchment Management Authority, Holbrook Landcare Network, Murray Local Land Services, Riverina Local Land Services and the National Environmental Science Programme This project has been assisted by the New South Wales Government through its Environmental Trust We thank our colleagues, David Blair, Ross Cunningham, Mason Crane, Daniel Florance, Christopher MacGregor, Lachlan McBurney, Thea O’Loughlin, Sachiko Okada and Jeff Wood Clive Hilliker produced the illustrations and Claire Shepherd, Tabitha Boyer and Craig Michael assisted with manuscript preparation We thank the many landholders involved in our research over the years, particularly Sam Archer, Chris and Sue Cain, Frank and Judy Chalker, Frank Chambers, Rodger and Jenny Dietrich, Des Feuerhardt, Frank Forragan, Peter Herriot, Andrew and Leonie Mathie, Rodger and Elizabeth Paterson, Russel Paech, Frank Palmer, Gary and Sandra Schilg, Brett and Christine Schultz, Paul, Joan and Ian Trevethan and Peter Webb This book has benefited from the contributions made by many photographers For this, we thank Zak Atkins, Sam Banks, Linda Broome, Rohan Clarke, Matt Clancy, Nick Clemann, Henry Cook, Matt Herring, Jules Farquhar, Jordan de Jong, Vince Kessner, Damian Lettoof, Jiri Lochman, Stewart Macdonald, Tiffany Mason, Angus McNab, Janice Mentiplay-Smith, Carol Probets, Julia Riley, Steve Sass, vii viii R o c k y O u t c r o p s i n A u s t r a li a Brendan Schembri, Alison Skinner, Bruce Thomson, Jonathan Webb, Steve Wilson and Stephen Zozaya We thank John Manger from CSIRO Publishing, whose support for this book is sincerely appreciated Introduction and background ‘Australia has a history far more ancient than any written – to read this history is one of the objects of geology – records preserved in the great stonebook of nature.’ Reverend J Milne Curran (1898)1 Rocky outcrops are a characteristic and spectacular part of the Australian countryside They have particular aesthetic appeal, and their solid appearance portrays an impression that they are hard and durable environments While this is partly true – rocky outcrops have been exposed to the environment for millions of years – they are also extremely fragile ecosystems, and places that are easily disturbed by human activities Many rocky outcrops, and the plants and animals associated with these environments, are at risk from key threatening processes such as altered fire regimes and overgrazing by livestock Some of them are so degraded that they require immediate protection and ongoing management to improve their conservation value From an ecological perspective, managing rocky outcrops is important because they support high levels of biological diversity, provide refuge for specialised plants and animals and host a wide variety of endemic species Rocky outcrops are significant, also from a cultural heritage perspective as many rock formations are sacred to Indigenous people These landforms are also used for recreational and 162 R o c k y O u t c r o p s i n A u s t r a li a Scree  An accumulation of loose stones or gravel on a slope Sedimentary rock  Rock that has been deposited in layers through the accumulation of minerals and/or organic particles Sedimentation  Mineral or organic matter deposited by water, air or ice Soil nitrification  Soil that has increased nitrogen levels caused by livestock urinating in the same place Tectonic uplift  The raising of a geographical area as a consequence of continental drift and plate tectonics Tor  Isolated hill or rocky peak Tuff  A light, porous rock formed by the consolidation of volcanic ash Volcanic rock  Rock that is formed from magma erupted from a volcano Volcanic rocks cover 8% of the Earth’s surface Index Abenaki language  access restriction  147–8 accidental fires  104 adaptive management, biodiversity conservation 141 aerial photographs  120, 123 aesthetic values, rocky outcrops  23 Agile Snake-eyed Skink  55 agricultural landscapes  5, 120–8, 132 air pollution  91 alarm calls (birds)  80 Albury  15, 16, 106, 108 algae  25, 51 alpine skinks  116 amphibians 66 Anangu people  22 antechinus 73–5 apron zone  131 aquatic invertebrates  85 arboreal marsupials  94 Arnhem Land  11, 17, 18, 38, 64, 67, 68, 69, 70, 73, 77, 148 Arnhem Plateau Sandstone Shrubland Complex  30, 143 artificial rocks  150, 151 artificial shelters  148 Arum Lily  101 Asteraceae (daisies)  30 Atkins, Zac  60 Atlas of Living Australia  127 Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples; see Indigenous Australians Australian Capital Territory  18, 90, 149 Australian Swiftlet  77 axe heads  37 Baboon Flowers  101 back-burning  105, 107, 137 Bald Rock National Park  10, 13, 18 Banded Fruit-dove  77 banded ironstone  9, 11, 14–15, 92 bandicoots 136 Banksia 134 Barn Owl  77 Barred Skipper  84 Barrier Range Dragon  51, 53 basalt  7, 8, 9, 10, 14, 92, 113, 160 Batholith  28, 160 bats  32, 65, 66 bees 46 Ben Lomond National Park  18, 52 Berrigan  41, 113, 129 bettongs 136 biodiversity management  2, 119–53 biodiversity threats  4, 89–118 biological legacies, tree stumps  92, 93 biophysical inventories  126–8 163 164 R o c k y O u t c r o p s i n A u s t r a li a birds  29, 66, 76–80, 94, 130, 136, 140–1, 145 see also rock-nesting birds Bitou Bush  102–3 Blackberry  101, 135 Blackberry Nightshade  100 Blackbirds 100 Black-flanked Rock-wallaby  35, 72, 139 Black Mountain Boulder Frog  66 Black Mountain Gecko  50, 51 Black Mountain (Kalkajaka) National Park  10, 18, 50–1 Black Mountain Skink  50, 51 Black Portuguese Millipede  99–100 Black Rat  137 Black Rock Skink  33, 34, 57 Black-spotted Spiny-tailed Rock Monitor  62, 64 Black-veined Ant-blue (Acrodipsas arcana) 83 Blakely’s Red Gum  106 Blanket Fern  24 bloodworms 85 Blotched Boulder Frog  67 Blue Mountains National Park  18, 80, 110 bluestone  111, 113 body modifications, rocky outcrop species 32 Bogong High Plains  58, 59, 60, 70, 116 Bogong Moths  71, 72 Boneseed, You Yangs and  101–2 boobies 76 Booroolong Frog  68 Borenore Karst  11 bornhardts 9 boulder fields  44, 49, 50, 51, 70, 82, 123 boulder-frogs 66 bounty killings, rock-wallabies  73 Box Gum Grassy Woodland  106 brachiopods  12, 160 Brazil  9, 12 Bridal Creeper  101 Broad-headed Snake  65, 66, 111, 138, 143 Broad-leaved Privet  102 broad-leaved weeds  134 Broad-tailed Gecko  60 Bronze Ant-blue (Acrodipsas brisbanensis) 83 Brown Honeyeater  29, 80 Brown Thornbill  80 Brown Tree Snake  66 brush-cutter 135 Brush-tailed Rock-wallaby  72–3, 103, 139 bryophytes  23, 25, 26 Buffalo Grevillea  44 Buffalo Sallow Wattle  44 buffer zones  129, 130, 132, 133, 143 building materials (rocks)  113 Bulgandry engravings  39 Bunbury Basalt  10 Bungonia National Park  13, 18 Burraja Indigenous Cultural and Environmental Discovery Centre 37 burrow networks  58, 59, 61, 116 Burrup Peninsula  39, 148 bushrangers  39–40, 42 bush rock collectors  111, 143, 148–9, 150 bush walking  40 butterflies  83–4, 93 calcium 82 calcium carbonate rocks  12 camouflage  32, 63 camping and hiking  23 canola cropping  92 canopy vegetation cover  105, 114, 122, 123, 135, 138 Cape Melville Boulder Frog  66 I n d ex Cape Melville Leaf-tailed Gecko  60 Cape Melville National Park  18 Cape York Peninsula  18, 55, 65 Cape York Rock-wallaby  35 carbonic acid  12 carnivorous species  26, 76 Carpentarian False Antechinus  73 Carpentarian Grasswren  35, 77–8 Carpentarian Rock-rat (Aywalirroomoo)  35, 69 Carpet Python  65, 66, 93 rabbit management and  135, 136 Carrai Cave Spider  82 Castle Rock  45 catchment areas, rocky outcrops 45–6 Catchment Management Authorities 141 Cathedral Range National Park  18, 33 cathedral stone  113 cave-dwelling species  75–6, 77, 82 Cave Frog  67 caves  36, 49, 50, 66, 82 cemented rocks  11, 13 central Australia  36, 52, 53, 69 Central Ranges Rock-skink  58 Central Rock-rat  35, 69 Champion’s Leaf-tailed Gecko  60, 63 Chattering Rock Frog  67 chemical weathering  41, 42 chert  14, 160 Chestnut-quilled Rock-pigeon  77, 78 Chiddarcooping Nature Reserve  18, 30 Children’s Python  65 Chillagoe–Mungana Caves National Park  13, 15, 18 Chillagoe Swiftlet  77 Chiltern–Mount Pilot National Park  18, 31 classification, rocky outcrops  123–6 clasts  13, 160 165 cliff-nesting birds  145, 146, 147 climate change biodiversity threats from  91, 115–16 leaf-tailed geckos and  60 rock-wallabies and  72 skinks and  58, 60 Cloak Fern  27 colonial history, rocky outcrops  39– 40 colonising species  134 colour patterns  32 lichens 25 rock-dwelling dragons  52 Common Fringe-Myrtle  24 Common Rock-rat  69 community education, restoration programs 151 community production area  conflicts, rocky outcrop land use  121 conglomerate rocks  9, 11, 13–14, 22, 36, 92 connectivity conservation  131, 133 conservation covenants  141–2 conservation programs, snakes  65 conservation reserves  3, 16, 17, 30, 90, 119, 120, 121, 133 Copland’s Rock Frog  67, 68 Copper Anti-blue (Acrodipsas cuprea) 83 corals 12 cormorants 76 Cornelian (Deudorix epijarbas dido) 83 corvids 79 Cotoneaster  100, 101, 102 Cowra  57, 101 Cradle Mountain–Lake St Clair National Park  9, 10, 18, 52 crevices  50, 67, 70, 78, 94, 95, 97, 99, 116 critically endangered species, Mountain Pygmy Possum  71 166 R o c k y O u t c r o p s i n A u s t r a li a cropping industries  91, 130 cross-pollinating insects  46 Crown Land  91, 143, 150 crustaceans 85 Cryptoblepharus 55 cryptogamic species  23, 160 cryptophytes 26 culturally significant regions  35–40, 121, 126–8, 144, 145, 147–8 Cunningham’s Skink  57, 58, 95, 139 Currawongs 100 cyanobacteria 25 Cypress Pine (Callitris spp.)  92, 134, 136 cytogenetics 72 Dainty Swallowtail  84 Dappled Snake-eyed Skink  55 Dark Purple Azure (Ogyris olane abrota) 83 Death Adder  80 degraded condition rocky outcrops  5, 124, 128 Department of Industry (NSW)  122 Department of Primary Industry (Vic.) 146 Department of the Environment (Cth) 4 desiccation stress, lizards  116 dessication-tolerant (poikilohydric) species 26 detritivore 160 Devils Marbles  13, 40 digital photography  141 dolerite  8, 9, 10, 17, 52, 160 dolomite 12 dome-shaped inselbergs  41, 45 dragons  50–2, 53, 54 Dreamtime stories  35–6 drought, fodder during  93, 94 dry condition plant species  26 dryland salinity  134 Dtellas  59, 61 dung accumulation, introduced species  96, 97, 131 dunnarts 75 Dwyer’s Red Gum  24 Early Nancy lilies  26, 27 eastern Australia  69, 116, 150 Eastern Pilbara Spiny-tailed Skink  56, 57 Eastern Ranges Rock-skink  58 Eastern Striped Skink  126 echolocation 77 ecological burning  102 ecological value, rocky outcrops  2, 22–35, 147–8 economic values, rocky outcrops 40–6 Eden Region  114 Egernia  34, 35, 55, 56, 57, 58 endemic species  30, 160 back-burning and  106 Black Mountain National Park  51 Broad-headed Snake  65 Mount Buffalo National Park  44 environmental monitoring  140–1 Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 (EPBC)  35, 143 epicormic buds  24, 28, 106, 160 epiphytic cacti  160 escarpments  17, 160 eucalypts  4, 13, 24, 28, 79, 80, 93, 134, 136 European Rabbit  96, 98, 99, 137 see also rabbit control; rabbit warren fumigation exclusion fences  135 exotic species  97, 107, 108, 125, 134 livestock and  129 extinct species  Aboriginal rock art and  38 I n d ex introduced predators and  103 reptiles  139, 140 extrusive igneous rocks  8, 10, 14 Eyre Peninsula  16, 45, 138 Fairy Park  43, 44 fairy shrimp  85 fallen timber landscapes, restoration 148–9 family groups Mountain Pygmy Possum  71 Rock-ringtail Possum  70 farming landscapes, rocky outcrops on 6 Fat-tailed False Antechinus  73–4 feldspar  8, 9, 160 fence skinks  53 fencing  128, 129 feral cats  103 feral goats  73, 97, 129, 135 feral herbivores  91, 95–9, 129 Fern-leaf Baeckea  30 ferns  26, 27, 109 field guides  127 Fiery Jewel (Hypochrysops ignitus) 83 Finchley engravings  39 fire-prone environments  4, 24, 60, 81 fire regime change  91, 96, 100, 104–9, 115, 143 fire regime control  40, 41, 136–8 fire-sensitive species  24, 28, 81, 104, 106, 108 Firethorn  100, 101 fire-tolerant species  28, 104 Fitzroy Land Snail (Mesodontrachia fitroyana) 81 Flat-leaf Bush Pea  24 Flat Rock Spider  82 Flinders Ranges  53, 116 flora, threatened  29–31, 127 flowchart (rocky outcrop management) 121 167 foliated metamorphic rocks  15 food production requirements  forestry operations, environmental damage  4, 114–15 formation process (rocks)  foxes (European Red Fox)  73, 103–4, 135, 146 Fringed Heath-blue  84 frogs 66–9 fuel load accumulation  105 Fuhn’s Snake-eyed Skink  55 funding, natural resource management organisations  141, 142 gannets 76 garden plants, escaped  101 Gawler Ranges  18, 40 Gawler Ranges Short-tailed Grasswren 35 Gecko ClaN Community Landcare Network Granite Creeks Project 142 geckos  13, 32, 58–61, 105 Geelong  41, 43, 96, 98 gene flow  132, 133 Genoveva Azure (Ogyris genoveva)  83 geological maps  122 geophytes 25–6 Ghost Bat  76 Gidgee Skink  56, 57 Girraween National Park  18, 32 Glass House Mountains National Park  10, 18 gliders 94 glyphosate 160 gnammas  36, 40, 41, 50, 160 see also natural rock holes gneiss  11, 13, 16, 160 goannas  36, 61–3 Golden-capped Boulder Frog  66–7 Goldfields region  14–15 168 R o c k y O u t c r o p s i n A u s t r a li a Gondwana 9 good condition rocky outcrops  124, 125, 128 gossamer-winged butterflies (Lycaenidae) 83–4 Goulburn Broken catchment  142 graffiti  110, 111, 112 Grampians (Gariwerd) National Park  11, 12, 18, 39, 139 granite  7–8, 10, 13, 16, 17, 18, 27, 29, 32, 40, 41, 51, 54, 56, 66, 75, 81, 111, 113, 114, 120, 160 Granite Creeks Project  142 granite dome  13, 112, 123 granite inselbergs  4, 5, 23, 44, 69 granite outcrops  9, 30, 42, 50, 90, 92, 94, 96, 97, 98, 108, 129, 150 invasive weeds and  100, 101 island biogeography theory and 126 granite ranges  106 Granite Skywalk  45 Granitic Hill Woodland  123 grassy box gum  grazing  91, 96, 128–30, 134, 141, 142, 143 Great Australian Bight  11, 12 Great Basalt Wall  10 Great Dividing Range  11, 16, 68, 69, 73, 116, 139, 142 greenstone  36, 111, 161 Grevillea 80 ground cover species  134 ground surveys  120, 123 Gulbaru Gecko  35 Gulf of Carpentaria  55, 73 Gungurru (Silver Princess)  14, 30, 80 Guthega (Snowy Mountains) Skink  58–9, 60, 116 gypsum 12 habitat loss  65, 91–2, 95 climate change and  115–16 frogs and  68 species loss and  habitat quality  123, 124 habitat restoration  6, 148–50 Hairy Wattle  24, 129 Hakea 80 Hamersley Range  11, 14 hang-gliding 110 Hanging Rock Recreation Reserve  10, 18 Hard Water Fern  27 Hawkesbury sandstone  11, 111 Hawthorn 101 Hayden  40, 42, 45 headstones 113 heat generation, back-burning  107 heaths  27, 136 Helena Aurora Range (Bungalbin)  11, 15, 18 hematite  14, 161 herbaceous plants  95 herbicides 135 herbivorous invertebrates  99–100 Herbland Mosaic  123 highly endangered species, Oenpelli Rock Python  64 hilltopping  83, 84 honeyeaters 79 Hopbush 134 Hosmer’s Skink  56, 57 House Mouse  137 humid microclimates  31, 51 Hunter, John  28 igneous rocks  7, 8–9, 10, 11, 13, 16, 92, 161 ignimbrites  8, 161 illegal collectors  111 incubation pattern, Australian Swiftlet 77 Indigenous Australians cultural heritage  150 fire regimes  138 I n d ex foods  93, 94 gnammas and  41 lands 133 manufacturing 36 rock art and heritage values  35, 36, 110, 147–8, 149 Uluru and  22, 145–6 water conservation  45 Indigenous Protected Areas  16, 17 Inglewood  40, 42 Inland Carpet Python (Murray Darling Carpet Python)  103, 126, 136, 137, 139, 146, 148 insectivorous plants  27 inselbergs  9, 12, 13, 17, 41, 44, 161 international tourism, conservation signage and  146–7 interpretative signs  144–7 intervening habitats, lack of  35, 139 introduced species  4, 91, 96–100, 103–4 intrusive igneous rocks  8, 10, 14 invasive weeds  100–3, 128, 134–5 invertebrates 81–5 ironbark 92 iron oxide  11, 14, 51 island habitats  124, 126 Judas goat technique  135–6 Kakadu National Park  11, 12, 15, 18, 39, 77 Kangaroo Grass  134 Kangaroo Island  18, 40 Karlu Karlu/Devils Marbles Conservation Reserve  10, 18 Karri  29, 143 karst landscapes  4, 7, 12–13, 161 Kata Tjuta  11, 14, 36, 40 Kate’s Leaf-tailed Gecko  63 Kimberley  18, 60, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74, 76, 77, 79 Kimberley Honeyeater  77 169 Kimberley Rock Monitor  62, 64 King’s Dtella  59, 61 Kooyoora State Park (Melville Caves)  18, 42 koppies (kopje)  9, 13, 126 Ku-ring-gai Chase National Park  18, 39 Kurrajong (Golden) Mistletoe  93 Kurrajongs 93–4 Kutini Boulder Frog  66 land acquisition  141 Landcare  133, 134, 141, 142 land restoration  133 landscape-scale projects  132–3 land sharing, land sparing versus  land snails  81–2 land uses, threatening processes and  91–5, 120, 134 larvae 85 latrine site, Cunningham’s Skink  58 La Trobe University  60, 95 Laura  62, 148 leaf-tailed gecko  32, 60, 63, 115 ledges 50 legislative frameworks  143 Lesueur’s Tree Frog  68 Lesueur’s Velvet Gecko  150, 151 Leviathan trail  43 lichens  23, 25, 26, 27, 85, 99, 109 LIDAR (light detection and ranging) mapping 122 lightning strikes  104, 105 lignotubers  28, 106, 161 lilies 26 limestone  9, 11, 12–13, 15, 16, 50, 60, 74, 75, 76, 78, 81, 82, 92, 111 Limestone Range Velvet Gecko  60, 62 Litchfield National Park  18, 120 litho-refugia 31 lizards  107, 126, 130 climate change and  116 habitat and  95, 150 170 R o c k y O u t c r o p s i n A u s t r a li a social behaviour  33, 34 locally extinct species, reintroduction 139–40 logging  114, 134, 143 Long-tailed Dunnart  74 Lord Howe Island  83 Lubbock, John  21 McCallum, Frank (Captain Melville)  40, 42 MacDonnell Ranges  11 Macleay’s Swallowtail  83 macropods  39, 72 magma  7, 8, 9, 10, 51, 161 Mallee vegetation  20, 91 mammals 69–76 management actions  128–42, 143 manganese oxides  51 mapping, rocky outcrops  120–3 marble  16, 111, 113 Marbled Velvet Gecko  60, 62, 126 Marbled Xenica  84 Mareeba Rock-wallaby  73 marine animal skeletons  11, 12 marriage ceremonies  23 marsupials  32, 36 martins 77 Masked Rock Frog  67 Mayer, Peter  44 Melbourne  40, 44, 111, 113 Melville Caves  40, 42 Melville Range  18, 55 metamorphic rocks  7, 8, 11, 15–16, 161 mica  8, 161 microclimates  81, 76, 134 microhabitats  23, 31, 49–50 midges 85 millipedes 99 minerals dissolution  24 missing attributes (classification)  124 moderate condition rocky outcrops  124, 128 moisture gradients  23 molecular techniques  72 monadnock 9 monitor lizards  61–3, 64, 98 monofluoroacetate 128 monogamous species  78–9, 161 monoliths  8, 13, 43, 161 Montane Ochre  84 montane rainforest frogs  68–9 Montane Rocky Shrubland  123 Moonlight Jewel (Hypochrysops delicia) 83 Morgan, Mad Dog (John Fuller)  40, 42 Morgan’s Lookout  40, 42 Moritz’s Dtella  59 mosses  23–4, 25, 85, 99 Mountain Ash  114 Mountain Plum-pine  72 Mountain Pygmy Possum  70–2, 115 Mountain Skink  52, 58 Mount Arapiles  11, 16, 18, 110, 145 Mount Augustus National Park  8, 11, 14, 18 Mount Buffalo National Park  18, 30, 41, 44, 106, 128 Mount Kaputar National Park  9, 10, 18 Mount Kosciuszko National Park  18, 58, 59, 60, 70, 115 Mount Monadnock  Mount Ossa  9, 10, 14 mudstones 92 Murphy’s Haystack  10, 18, 40 Murray Darling Carpet Python  136 mustering 135 Mutawintji National Park  51, 53 myxoma virus  96, 136 Namadgi National Park  18, 90 I n d ex Nankeen Kestrel  109 Narrow-mouthed Frog (Microhylidae) 66 National Herbarium of Victoria  127, 128 National Heritage Values  15 National Landcare Programme; see Landcare National Parks  16–17, 18, 40, 133, 143–50 National Reserve System  2, 91 native animals, back-burning and 107 native vegetation diversity improvement  132 location 4 loss  91, 94 protection of  95 regeneration  130–3, 141 reptile diversity and  140 tourism and  110 natural disturbance  134 natural rock holes (gnammas)  40, 41, 45, 96 see also gnammas nature-based tourism  144 Nature Conservation Trust  141, 142 nature reserves  17, 133 Nawarla Gabarnmung rock art  38 near extinctions, invasive predators and 103 Necklace Fern  27 New England  28, 40, 128 New South Wales  9, 10, 11, 13, 14, 16, 18, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 39, 40, 41, 42, 51, 53, 57, 58, 59, 60, 61, 62, 65, 66, 68, 71, 72, 73, 78, 80, 82, 84, 92, 93, 94, 95, 96, 97, 100, 101, 102, 106, 108, 110, 113, 114, 115, 116, 122, 126, 128, 129, 136, 137, 138, 141, 142, 143, 145, 148 Ningbing False Antechinus  73, 74 171 nocturnal species  58, 161 Nodding Blue Lily  24, 26, 27 non-foliated metamorphic rocks  15 non-government organisations  141 non-vascular plants  25 northern Australia  50, 53, 60, 63, 65, 67, 68, 69, 70, 77, 78, 101 Northern Cave Bat  76 Northern Snow Skink  52 Northern Spotted Dtella  60, 61 Northern Spotted Velvet Gecko  60, 62 Northern Territory  10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 18, 29, 38, 39, 40, 41, 55, 56, 60, 61, 64, 74, 75, 76, 77, 81, 120, 127, 143, 145 nubbins  9, 126 nutrient exchange  133 obligate seeders  24, 28, 104, 161 Ocellated (Spotted) Skink  52 Ocellated Velvet Gecko  62 Oenpelli Rock Python  63, 64 off-road motor sports  110 offshore islands, skinks on  53 Olive Python  63 online resources  127 Orange Leaf-Nosed Bat  75, 76 Ord-Victoria region  59–60 Organ Pipes National Park  9, 10, 14, 18 Ornate Dragon  52, 54 Oscar Range  60, 62 Osprey 76 outwash fan  131 overgrazing  92, 95–9, 120 overhangs  36, 37, 50 overstorey vegetation  95, 128 owls  76, 94 parrots  76, 94 patch-scale projects  131–2 172 R o c k y O u t c r o p s i n A u s t r a li a patch size, reptile species numbers and 126 Paterson’s Curse  108 Pedra Branca Cool Skink  52–3 Pencilled Blue (Candalides cyprotus) 83 Peninsula Dragon  51, 53 Peppercorn  101, 135 Peregrine Falcon  76, 109, 110, 145 signage and  146, 147 peri-urban outcrops  101, 102 permanent streams, frogs and  66 pest animal control  134, 135–6 petroglyphs  39, 161 photographers, environmental damage 111 photo points  140 physical environmental threats  109– 15 picnics  43, 109 Pilbara  14, 18, 56, 60, 69, 75, 76 Pilbara Rock Monitor  62, 64 Pink-tailed Worm-lizard, habitat restoration 149–50 Place, Evolution and Rock Art Heritage Unit (PERAHU)  148 plant identification services  127 plant species  22–9, 133–4 tourism and  109 plutonic igneous rocks  8, 14, 161 poikilohydric species  26 poison baiting  135 poison peas  128 pollination 133 poor condition rocky outcrops  124, 125, 128 Porongurup National Park  18, 29, 45, 90 possums  70–2, 94, 136 Precambrian period  14, 90 predators and prey species  103–4, 136 Rock-wallabies 73 Rock Warblers  80 priority setting  128 pristine condition rocky outcrops  123, 124, 128 private property  91, 142 Privet  101, 135 Proserpine Rock-wallaby  35 protected areas  16–18, 133, 143–50 pythons  65, 98 quarrying  91, 111, 113–14 quartz  8, 9, 14, 161 quartzite  7, 11, 15–16, 50, 69, 161 Queensland  10, 13, 15, 18, 31, 32, 35, 39, 50, 51, 55, 56, 60, 61, 62, 63, 66, 69, 72, 73, 76, 77, 82, 92, 127, 148 Quinkan Velvet Gecko  60, 62 rabbit control  129, 136, 142 see also European Rabbit rabbit warren fumigation  97, 98, 99, 135 Ragged Snake-eyed Skink  94, 126 railway ballast  113 Rainbow Serpent  64 rapid environmental assessments  140 raptors  76, 98 rats 93 recreation and tourism values  40–5, 91, 109–10, 121 Red-barred Dragon  51, 53 reflectivity  120, 122 regeneration  28, 92, 115, 139–40, 151 rehydrated plants  26, 27 reinfestation 135 Remarkable Rocks  18, 40 remnant vegetation  95, 133 remote sensing  122, 140 reproduction hilltopping (birds)  84 plants 28 reptiles  31, 94, 105, 124, 148 I n d ex canopy cover removal and  138 extinctions  139, 140 habitat restoration and  150 monitoring 141 patch size and  126 rocky habitat dwelling  50–66 tree plantings and  135 resprouters  24, 28, 29, 104, 161 resurrection plants  27, 161 revegetation  92, 130–3, 135, 142 rhizomes  24, 25 Ring-tailed Dragon  52, 53 Rio de Janeiro  9, 12 road building  113 Robust Dtella  61 Robust Velvet Gecko  62 rock art, Indigenous  37, 38, 39 rock-climbing  40, 43, 109, 110, 145, 147 rock-crawling 110–11 rock cycle  rock damage  107, 112 Rock-dwelling Dtella  59 rock-dwelling fauna  49–87, 154–9 rock-dwelling plants  80 Rock Fern  27 rock formation viewing  40 Rockhole Frog  67, 68 rock holes; see gnammas Rock Isotome  24 Rock Nature Preserve (Kengal)  16, 18, 31, 84, 145 rock-nesting birds  31, 35, 76, 77, 109, 110 Rock Parrot  77 rock pools  36, 85 rock-rats 69–70 Rock Ringtail Possum (Rock-haunting Ringtail Possum)  70 rocks, fire damage to  109 rock shelters, Indigenous Australians and 37 173 Rock-skink (Liopholis) 58 rock slabs  49, 50, 54 rock surfaces  109–10, 150 rock-wallabies  32, 65, 72–3 decline  97, 103, 104 Rock Warbler (Origma)  78–9, 80 Rocky Outcrop Shrubland  123 Rocky River Frog  68 Rusty Dragon  51–2 sand grains  11 sandstone  4, 8, 9, 11, 12, 15, 16, 17, 22, 36, 50, 52–3, 55, 59, 60, 63, 64, 74, 75, 81, 82, 92, 111, 113 sandstone escarpments  65, 66, 67, 69, 70, 71, 77, 78, 80, 150 Sandstone False Antechinus  73, 74 sandstone rock industry  65 Sandstone Shrike-thrush  77, 78, 79 satellite images  120, 122 Sawn Rocks  9, 10 saxicolous species  49, 126 Scaly-tailed Possum (llangnalya)  70, 71 scat piles  58 schist  11, 16, 161 scientific journals  128 scientific permits  140 scree slopes  70, 162 sedimentary rocks  7, 8, 9, 11, 12–15, 92, 162 seed-dispersing birds  100 seed production  24, 132, 134 seed regeneration, fire and  106, 107, 108 sentimental values, rocky outcrops  23 serras 9 shales 92 shallow soils  27 sheep-wheat belt  91–2, 96 shellfish 12 sheltered wet areas  50 174 R o c k y O u t c r o p s i n A u s t r a li a shrimps 85 shrubs  129, 134, 136 sign placement  144, 148 Silky Azure (Ogyris oroetes) 83 Silver Princess (Caesia) (Gungurru)  29, 30 site-scale projects  131, 132 skinks 52–8 skippers (Hesperiidae)  83 ski resorts, habitat damage  116 slugs 99 Small Ant-blue (Acrodipsas myrmecophila) 83 Small Dingy Skipper (Hesperilla crypsigramma) 83 snails 99 Snake-eyed Skink  53, 55 snakes  63–6, 99, 105, 130 Snow Gum  106 social behaviour, rocky outcrop species  32–4, 57, 58 soil erosion  96, 98, 100, 101, 107, 120, 131, 134 soil nitrification  96, 162 South Australia  10, 11, 12, 18, 40, 41, 45, 51, 53, 71 south-eastern Australia  91, 103, 120, 136, 139 Southern Marbled Gecko  94 Southern Rainbow Skink  126 Southern Snow Skink  52, 54 South-western Rock-skink  58 South West Slopes  31, 33, 95 species diversity  31, 126 species loss  sphagnum frogs  68–9 spiders 82 spinifex 78 Spiny-tailed Monitor  62, 64 spore reproduction  25, 27 spot-spraying 135 Spotted Dtella  60 Spotted Jezebel  84 Spotted Python  65 Spotted Rock Dtella  60, 61 state forests  17, 91, 143, 150 stepping stones habitats  132, 133 stilting 52 Stimson’s Python  65 Stirling Range National Park  11, 18 stock protection  120 stone tools, Indigenous Australians  36, 37 ‘stony waste’ concept  stream rehabilitation  142 stream rock platforms  68 Striped Legless Lizard  149 stubble-burning 104 subvolcanic igneous rocks  Sugarloaf Mountain  9, 12 summits 50 sundews  26, 27 sun-exposed habitat, reptiles and  137, 138 surface rocks  49, 50 swallows 77 swallowtails (Papilionidae)  83 Sydney  12, 39, 60, 66, 78, 80, 111, 113, 138 Tabletop Mountain (Yambla Range) 11, 14, 15, 18, 31 Taỗon, Paul 1478 tadpoles, frogs and  66 Tasmania  9, 10, 14, 17, 18, 38, 39, 52–3, 54, 82, 83, 116, 146 Tawny Dragon  51, 116 taxonomic history, rock-wallabies  72 Teatree 134 tectonic uplift  6, 162 tender-based auctions  142 Tenterfield  73, 110 terrestrial vertebrates  52 text formatting, signs  144 I n d ex theme parks  43 thermal damage, forestry operations and 114 thermoregulation 135 threatened species  35 bush rock collectors and  143, 149 canopy cover and  138 flora 29–31 forestry operations and  114 Guthega Skink  60 Inland Carpet Python  146, 148 Peregrine Falcon  146, 147 protection of  132 rock-wallabies 72–3 Woolly Ragwort  31 Threatened Species Conservation Act 1995 (TSC Act)  31, 84, 143 threatening land uses  2, 91, 121 Three Sisters, The  110 Thunderbolt’s Rock  40 Thylacine  38, 39 tool use, Sandstone Shrike-thrush  79 torpor, Antechinus  74–5 tors  9, 44, 123, 162 tourism  22, 41–5 toxic plants  128 trampling 143 trapdoor spider  82 tree frogs (Hylidae)  67 tree hollows  61, 92, 94 Tree of Heaven  100, 101, 135 tree plantations  131, 133, 134 Tree Skink  33, 34, 57, 94, 107, 126, 140 troglodytes 13 Trust for Nature  141 tuffs  8, 162 turtlebacks 9 Uluru Kata Tjuta National Park  11, 14, 18, 22, 40, 43 Dreamtime story  35–6 175 signage 145–6 Undara lava tunnels  82 United States of America (USA)  9, 111 University of Sydney  138, 150 utilitarian values  121 Valley of the Winds walk  22 values, rocky outcrops  21–48, 121 vandalism environmental damage  91, 110–12 Indigenous rock art sites  148, 149 Varied Dusky-blue  84 vascular plants  24, 128 vegetation communities  5, 22, 123, 128 classification and assessment  124, 140 loss 91–5 vegetation regeneration, fire and  108 Velvet Geckos  60, 62 vertical rock faces  49 Victoria  9, 10, 11, 12, 14, 16, 31, 33, 36, 37, 39, 40, 41, 42, 44, 57, 58, 59, 60, 71, 72, 96, 98, 103, 110, 112, 114, 116, 128, 134, 136, 139, 141, 142, 145, 146 National Parks  18, 44 volcanic rock  8, 9, 10, 14, 162 walking trails  43, 109, 147 Wallaby Grass  134 wallaroos  36, 69 Walla Walla  40, 42 wall skinks  53 Ward, Frederick (Captain Thunderbolt) 40 warning signs  144 Warrumbungles  10, 18, 33, 40 ‘wasteland’ concept  water conservation values  45–6 water fleas  85 176 R o c k y O u t c r o p s i n A u s t r a li a waterholes  40, 45–6, 49, 85 water loss  27, 29, 50, 120 water pollution  91 water table rise  134 Wave Rock  10, 18, 40, 42, 45 Wedge-tailed Eagle  125 weed invasion  91, 92, 96, 104, 127, 130, 134, 135, 137, 141, 143 Western Australia  8, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 17, 18, 27, 29, 30, 39, 40, 41, 42, 45, 50, 51, 52, 54, 56, 60, 61, 62, 69, 71, 72, 74, 75, 80, 81, 85, 90, 91, 101, 120, 128, 139, 143, 148 West MacDonnell National Park  18, 69, 75 Wet Rocky Outcrop Shrub  123 whalebacks  9, 129 wheatbelt region (WA)  29 whip scorpion  82 White-bellied Sea-eagle  76, 109 White Cypress Pine  106, 108, 125 White-lined Honeyeater  77 White-quilled Rock-pigeon  77, 78 White’s Skink  58 White-throated Grasswren  77, 78 wildlife reestablishment  5, 31–5, 132 wildlife surveys  140–1 Wilsons Promontory  18, 40, 41 Wollemi National Park  148 woody weeds  102, 135 Woolly Ragwort  24, 30–1 World Extreme Rock Crawling Championships (W.E.ROCK)  110 World Heritage listing  22 Wurmbea 26–7 Wyberba Leaf-tailed Gecko  32, 60 Yellow-footed Antechinus  148 Yellow Grass-skipper (Neohesperilla xanthomera) 83 Yinnietharra Rock Dragon  50–1, 52 You Yangs  10, 18, 30, 102, 103 ... adopting wildlife friendly farming practices such as retaining patches of natural habitat, reducing stocking rates and minimising the use of fertilisers By contrast, land sparing involves setting... 128 Managing rocky outcrops in state forests and on Crown Land 143 Managing rocky outcrops in National Parks and other protected areas 143 Concluding comments 150 References 152 Appendix Australian... li a In agricultural regions, rocky outcrops are a prominent feature of farming landscapes, especially in southeastern and south-western Australia Depending on land use history, many rocky outcrops

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