Gulf Falls and Uplands

Bioregional Description

The Gulf Falls and Uplands bioregions comprises undulating terrain with scattered low, steep hills on Proterozoic and Palaeozoic sedimentary rocks, often overlain by lateritised Tertiary material. Soils are mostly skeletal or shallow sands. The most extensive vegetation is woodland dominated by Darwin Stringybark Eucalyptus tetrodonta and Variable-barked Bloodwood C. dichromophloia with spinifex understorey, and woodland dominated by Northern Box Eucalyptus tectifica with tussock grass understorey. This bioregion includes two subregions.

Special values

The ranges of this bioregion have some significant refugial values, and include some endemic or near-endemic species and many geographically disjunct occurrences. Threatened species include the highly localised and endangered carpentarian rock-rat and the endangered gouldian finch.

taxa National Northern Territory
endangered vulnerable endangered vulnerable
plants 0 1 0 0
birds 1 3 2 4
mammals 1 2 1 1

There is also some substantial evidence that there is broad scale decline affecting at least some groups of mammals and birds in this bioregion, in addition to those species currently listed as threatened.

Management Responses

Further Information and Gaps