Sturt Plateau

Bioregional Description

The Sturt Plateau bioregion mostly comprises a gently undulating plain on lateritised Cretaceous sandstones. Soils are predominantly neutral sandy red and yellow earths. The most extensive vegetation is eucalypt woodland (dominated by variable-barked bloodwood Eucalyptus dichromophloia) with spinifex understorey, but there are also large areas of lancewood (Acacia shirleyi) thickets, bullwaddy (Macropteranthes keckwickii) woodlands, Acacia shrublands on deep sands, and eucalypt open forests (dominated by a range of species including Darwin stringybark Eucalyptus tetrodonta) over tussock grass understorey. The bioregion is divided into 3 subregions.

Special values

The Sturt Plateau bioregion includes the most extensive areas of the distinctive lancewood-bullwaddy vegetation associations, with associated fauna including spectacled hare-wallaby. There are a range of small wetlands associated with sinkholes and minor depressions in the generally flat landscape.

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

There is also some 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