Tiwi-Cobourg

Bioregional Description

This coastal region comprises Australia's second and fifth largest islands (Melville and Bathurst Island in the Tiwi island group), Croker Island and the adjacent Cobourg Peninsula. Coastal vegetation includes some mangroves and saline flats, although this bioregion lacks the large rivers which influence vegetation patterning in other coastal regions. Most of this bioregion is covered by tall eucalypt open forests, typically dominated by Darwin woollybutt (Eucalyptus miniata), Darwin stringybark (E. tetrodonta) and Melville Island bloodwood (E. nesophila), but often with northern cypress-pine Callitris intratropica and the tall palm Gronophyllum ramsayi co-dominant. The Tiwi Islands support a relatively high density and total area of monsoon rainforest patches, with distinctive species composition. There are also substantial areas there of a distinctive "treeless plain" vegetation. This bioregion is of low relief, with laterite and Cretaceous sandstone the dominant substrates. The bioregion is entirely Aboriginal land. It includes two subregions.

Special values

The Tiwi Islands support about 20 endemic plant and vertebrate animal taxa, and about 44 taxa considered threatened at Territory or national level (including 14 taxa listed under the EPBCA). The bioregion contains important breeding sites for marine turtles and colonial seabirds, and a Ramsar wetland on the Cobourg Peninsula. It contains the highest density of rainforest patches in the Northern Territory, and two rainforest types not known elsewhere. Eucalypt forests are better developed (highest basal area, canopy height) in this bioregion than elsewhere in northern Australia. The Tiwi Islands contains "treeless plain" vegetation, without parallel on the NT mainland. The bioregion is particularly significant because the isolation of its islands and mainland peninsula offer some refugial protection for its biota from threatening processes.

taxa National Northern Territory
endangered vulnerable endangered vulnerable
plants 1 0 8 11
reptiles 2 4 0 1
birds 0 4 1 1
mammals 0 2 0 2

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