Last updated:
09 Oct 2020
Distribution of the species within this region
The Grey-headed Flying-fox is known or predicted to occur in the following sub-regions of the
South East Corner Interim Biogeographic Regionalisation of Australia Region.
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Vegetation formations, classes and types
In this region the Grey-headed Flying-fox - South East Corner is known to
be associated with the following vegetation formations and classes. Click on a name to get background information
about it.
- Grasslands
- Maritime Grasslands
- Central Headland Grassland
- Southern Headland Grassland
- Spinifex Strandline Grassland
- Temperate Montane Grasslands
- Southern Tableland Valley Flats Damp Grassland
- Wallaby Grass - Kangaroo Grass - Rush - Blown Grass Wet Tussock Grassland Moist Grasslands of the South Eastern Highlands Bioregion
- Western Slopes Grasslands
- Bluegrass - Redleg Grass - Common Woodruff clay plain grassland of northern Brigalow Belt South Bioregion
- Derived tall spear grass grassland on mainly basalt hills of the Liverpool Plains, Liverpool Range and in the upper Hunter Valley (Merriwa district), south-eastern Brigalow Belt South Bioregion
- Derived Wire Grass grassland of the NSW Brigalow Belt South Bioregion and Nandewar Bioregion
- Show 3 more vegetation type(s)
- Saline wetlands
- Mangrove Swamps
- Far North Estuarine Mangrove-Swamp Oak Forest
- Far North Mangrove Forest
- Grey Mangrove-River Mangrove Forest
- Saltmarshes
- Estuarine Club Rush-Arrowgrass Wetland
- Samphire Saltmarsh
- Sporobolus virginicus Saltmarsh
- Semi-arid woodlands (grassy sub-formation)
- Brigalow Clay Plain Woodlands
- Brigalow - Belah open forest / woodland on alluvial often gilgaied clay from Pilliga Scrub to Goondiwindi, Brigalow Belt South Bioregion
- Brigalow - Bladder Saltbush open woodland to tall open shrubland in the Come-By-Chance region, Darling Riverine Plains Bioregion and Brigalow Belt South Bioregion
- Poplar Box - Yellow Box - Western Grey Box grassy woodland on cracking clay soils mainly in the Liverpool Plains, Brigalow Belt South Bioregion
- Inland Floodplain Woodlands
- River Red Gum grassy chenopod open tall woodland (wetland) on floodplain clay soil of the Darling Riverine Plains Bioregion and western Brigalow Belt South Bioregion
- Yellow Box woodland on sandy loam soils on alluvial plains mainly in the upper Darling Riverine Plain Bioregion
- North-west Floodplain Woodlands
- Belah woodland on alluvial plains and low rises in the central NSW wheatbelt to Pilliga and Liverpool Plains regions.
- Riverine Plain Woodlands
- Central Hunter Weeping Myall Forest
- Semi-arid woodlands (shrubby sub-formation)
- North-west Alluvial Sand Woodlands
- Carbeen - White Cypress Pine - Curracabah - White Box tall woodland on sand in the Narrabri - Warialda region of the Brigalow Belt South Bioregion
- Mixed scrub low open woodland on sand rises and dunes on floodplains in the Darling Riverine Plains Bioregion and Brigalow Belt South Bioregion
- Silver-leaved Ironbark - White Cypress Pine - Rough-barked Apple woodland on alluvial terraces in central-north NSW