Mallee (biogeographic region)


Mallee, also known as Roe Botanical District, is a biogeographic region in southern Western Australia. Located between the Esperance Plains, Avon Wheatbelt and Coolgardie regions, it has a low, gently undulating topography, a semi-arid mediterranean climate, and extensive Eucalyptus mallee vegetation. About half of the region has been cleared for intensive agriculture. Recognised as a region under the Interim Biogeographic Regionalisation for Australia, it was first defined by John Stanley Beard in 1980.

Geography and geology

The Mallee region has a complex shape with tortuous boundaries, but may be roughly approximated as the triangular area south of a line from Bruce Rock to Eyre, but not within 40 kilometres of the south coast, except at its eastern limits. It has an area of about 79000 square kilometres, making it about a quarter of the South West Botanic Province, 3% of the state, and 1% of Australia. It is bounded to the south by the Esperance Plains region; to the west and northwest by the Avon Wheatbelt region; and to the east by the Coolgardie region.
There are a number of small towns in the west of the region, where wheat is grown. These include Gnowangerup, Lake Grace, Newdegate, Kondinin and Hyden. Also of note is the tourist attraction Wave Rock. Further east, the area is virtually uninhabited, except for Lake King, and a few small towns along the Coolgardie-Esperance Highway south of Norseman, such as Grass Patch and Salmon Gums.
Most soil is sand over clay, overlying Archean and Proterozoic granite of the Yilgarn Craton. At the eastern limits there is some calcareous soil overlying Eocene limestone. The region has a low, gently undulating topography, with somewhat occluded drainage, resulting in a series of playa lakes.

Climate

Mallee is semi-arid, with a warm, dry, Mediterranean climate. It has seven to eight dry months. Rainfall in winter is typically between 300 and 500 millimetres.

JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDecYear
Mean daily maximum temperature30.5°C
86.9°F
29.5 °C
85.1 °F
27.2 °C
81.0 °F
23.5 °C
74.3 °F
19.6 °C
67.3 °F
16.8 °C
62.2 °F
16.0 °C
60.8 °F
17.2 °C
63.0 °F
20.4 °C
68.7 °F
23.2 °C
73.8 °F
26.1 °C
79.0 °F
28.9 °C
84.0 °F
23.2 °C
73.8 °F
Mean daily minimum temperature14.0 °C
57.2 °F
14.2 °C
57.6 °F
12.7 °C
54.9 °F
10.0 °C
50.0 °F
7.2 °C
45.0 °F
5.6 °C
42.1 °F
4.6 °C
40.3 °F
4.7 °C
40.5 °F
5.8 °C
42.4 °F
7.5 °C
45.5 °F
10.1 °C
50.2 °F
12.3 °C
54.1 °F
9.0 °C
48.2 °F
Mean total rainfall19.3 mm
0.7 in
23.4 mm
0.9 in
23.1 mm
0.9 in
26.0 mm
1.0 in
35.1 mm
1.4 in
40.9 mm
1.6 in
36.7 mm
1.4 in
33.9 mm
1.3 in
31.5 mm
1.2 in
26.8 mm
1.0 in
25.8 mm
1.0 in
19.3 mm
0.7 in
341.9 mm
13.2 in
Mean number of rain days3.94.14.97.19.410.811.911.59.77.75.74.290.9

Vegetation

The region's vegetation is predominantly Eucalyptus mallee over myrtaceous and proteaceous heath. Over 50% of the area is vegetated entirely by mallee, and a further 25% is mainly mallee but with patches of woodland; the latter vegetation occurs mainly on the calcareous soils to the east. The mallee consists of numerous Eucalyptus species, the most consistent being E. eremophila. Seasonally wet and alluvial areas are vegetated by Melaleuca shrublands where fresh, and Tecticornia low shrublands where saline. There are also occasional thickets of Allocasuarina, especially on greenstone hills.
As of 2007, the Mallee region is known to contain 3443 indigenous vascular plant species, and a further 239 naturalised alien species. As with other regions in semi-arid areas of the South West, it exhibits high endemism, especially with respect to Eucalyptus and Acacia species. The endangered flora of the Mallee region consists of 55 species, with a further 325 species having been declared Priority Flora under the Department of Environment and Conservation's Declared Rare and Priority Flora List.
Species richness ranges from 17 to 48 species per 1000 m². The lowest species richness occurs in severe habitats such as alongside salt lakes, but also in the areas of highest soil nutrition, where dominant species suppress associated species. Conversely, the highest species richness occurs in soils with the lowest soil nutrition. Most species are killed by fire and regenerate from seed, suggesting that they have evolved in an environment in which fire is infrequent.

Major Vegetation GroupArea before European settlementArea circa 1997
Cleared / modified native vegetation-3,389,464 ha
Mallee woodlands and shrublands4,208,658 ha 2,152,520
Eucalyptus open woodlands1,860,688 ha 896,404
Eucalpt woodlands587,132 ha 587,132
Heath432,536 ha 196,164 ha
Mangroves, tidal mudflat, samphire and bare areas, claypan, sand, rock, salt lakes, lagoons, lakes212,504 ha 105,308 ha
Other shrublands58,628 ha 53,316 ha
Chenopod shrub, samphire shrub and forblands22,652 ha 5,516 ha
Eucalypt low open forest6,100 ha 4,492 ha
Low closed forest and closed shrublands2,912 ha 2,668 ha
Acacia shrublands1,352 ha 1,348 ha
Other grasslands, herblands, sedgelands and rushlands820 ha 364 ha
Casuarina forest and woodlands612 ha 116 ha
Tussock grasslands28 ha 4 ha
Melaleuca forest and woodlands12 ha 4 ha


Land use

Approximately 56% of the Mallee region falls within what the Department of Agriculture and Food calls the "Intensive Land-use Zone", the area of Western Australia that has been largely cleared and developed for intensive agriculture such as cropping and livestock production. This includes most of the western parts of the region, and a smaller area along the road from Norseman to Esperance. Within this area, only 19.5% of the native vegetation remains uncleared. The remaining 44% of the region falls within the "Extensive Land-use Zone", where the native vegetation has not been cleared but may have been degraded by the grazing of introduced animals and/or changes to the fire regime. Thus about 44.9% of the total Mallee region has been cleared. The majority of clearing was undertaken by the Government of Western Australia between 1958 and 1969, under a program of assisted settlement in which the Government cleared, fenced and stocked virgin crown land, then sold it to aspiring settlers. There has been virtually no further clearing since 1980, when Beard estimated the cleared proportion of the region at 44%.
About 30% of the Esperance Plains region is now in protected areas. It therefore has only medium priority under Australia's National Reserve System.

Biogeography

Early biogeographic regionalisations of Western Australia do not recognise the Mallee region. It cannot be distinguished in Ludwig Diels' 1906 regionalisation of the South West, and is treated as part of the Wheatbelt in Edward de Courcy Clarke's 1926 map. It first appeared in Beard's 1980 phytogeographic regionalisation of Western Australia, but with an eastern limit of Point Culver. Beard named it "Roe Botanical District" in honour of John Septimus Roe, who explored the area in 1848. By 1984, Beard's phytogeographic regions were being presented more generally as "natural regions", and as such were given more widely recognisable names. Thus the "Roe Botanical District" became "Mallee".
When the IBRA was published in the 1990s, Beard's regionalisation was used as the baseline for Western Australia. The Mallee region was accepted as defined by Beard, and has since survived a number of revisions. The only significant change to its boundary is the extension of its eastern boundary eastwards along the coast as far as Eyre. The most recent revision, Version 6.1, defines two sub-regions for the Mallee region, Western Mallee and Eastern Mallee.
Under the World Wildlife Fund's biogeographic regionalisation of the Earth's land into "ecoregions", Mallee is combined with Esperance Plains to form the Esperance mallee ecoregion.