Last updated:
18 Mar 2022
Distribution of the species within this region
The Regent Honeyeater is known or predicted to occur in the following sub-regions of the
Sydney Basin Interim Biogeographic Regionalisation of Australia Region.
Click on column headers to sort
Vegetation formations, classes and types
In this region the Regent Honeyeater - Sydney Basin is known to
be associated with the following vegetation formations and classes. Click on a name to get background information
about it.
- Grassy woodlands
- Coastal Valley Grassy Woodlands
- Acacia Creek Grassy Forest
- Araluen Scarp Grassy Forest
- Blakely's Red Gum - Rough-barked Apple shrubby woodland of central and upper Hunter
- Show 24 more vegetation type(s)
- Floodplain Transition Woodlands
- Western Grey Box - cypress pine shrub grass shrub tall woodland in the Brigalow Belt South Bioregion
- Yellow Box - River Red Gum tall grassy riverine woodland of NSW South Western Slopes Bioregion and Riverina Bioregion
- New England Grassy Woodlands
- Blakely's Red Gum - Yellow Box grassy open forest or woodland of the New England Tableland Bioregion
- Blakely's Red Gum - Yellow Box grassy woodland of the New England Tableland Bioregion
- Broad-leaved Stringybark - Blakely's Red Gum grassy woodlands of the New England Tableland Bioregion
- Show 16 more vegetation type(s)
- Southern Tableland Grassy Woodlands
- Apple Box - Yellow Box dry grassy woodland of the South Eastern Highlands Bioregion
- Blakely's Red Gum - Yellow Box - Rough-barked Apple grassy woodland of the Capertee Valley, Sydney Basin Bioregion
- Bondo Slopes Red Stringybark Grassy Forest
- Show 13 more vegetation type(s)
- Subalpine Woodlands
- Snow Gum - Candle Bark woodland on broad valley flats of the tablelands and slopes, South Eastern Highlands Bioregion
- Tableland Clay Grassy Woodlands
- Brittle Gum - stringybark shrubby open forest on basalt residuals in the Capertee Valley, Sydney Basin Bioregion
- Manna Gum - Rough-barked Apple - Yellow Box grassy woodland/open forest of the New England Tableland Bioregion and NSW North Coast Bioregion
- Mountain Gum - Ribbon Gum open forest of drainage lines of the southern New England Tableland Bioregion
- New England Ribbon Gum Grassy Forest
- Ribbon Gum - Rough-barked Apple - Yellow Box grassy woodland/open forest of the New England Tableland Bioregion and NSW North Coast Bioregion
- Western Slopes Grassy Woodlands
- Apple Box - Blakely's Red Gum moist valley and footslopes grass-forb open forest of the NSW South Western Slopes Bioregion
- Apple Box - Silver Banksia - Drooping Sheoak open woodland - tall shrubland in protected gullies of the Coolac - Tumut serpentinite belt, NSW South Western Slopes Bioregion.
- Blakely's Red Gum - White Box - Yellow Box - Black Cypress Pine box grass/shrub woodland on clay loam soils on undulating hills of central NSW South Western Slopes Bioregion
- Show 59 more vegetation type(s)
- Rainforests
- Dry Rainforests
- Grey Myrtle - Grey Gum gully dry rainforest on sandstone ranges of the Sydney Basin
- Upper Hunter Ranges Moist Gully Forest
- Semi-arid woodlands (shrubby sub-formation)
- Inland Rocky Hill Woodlands
- Mugga Ironbark -Tumbledown Red Gum - Red Box - Black Cypress Pine open forest on shallow stony soils on hills in the NSW South Western Slopes Bioregion
- Tumbledown Red Gum - White Cypress Pine hill woodland in the southern part of the NSW South Western Slopes Bioregion
- Riverine Sandhill Woodlands
- Yellow Box - White Cypress Pine grassy woodland on deep sandy-loam alluvial soils of the eastern Riverina Bioregion and western NSW South Western Slopes Bioregion