Mount Gibson Sanctuary is a 1,305-square-kilometre (504 sq mi) nature reserve on the northern edge of the Wheatbelt and the southern margin of uncleared rangeland country, 350 kilometres (220 mi) north-east of Perth in mid-west Western Australia. The nearest large town is Dalwallinu. It is in the Avon-Wheatbelt Bioregion and is owned and managed by the Australian Wildlife Conservancy (AWC).
Mount Gibson Sanctuary Western Australia | |
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Nearest town or city | Dalwallinu |
Coordinates | 29°43′26″S 117°10′14″E / 29.724°S 117.1705°E |
Established | 2001 |
Area | 1,305 km2 (503.9 sq mi) |
Managing authorities | Australian Wildlife Conservancy |
Website | Mount Gibson Sanctuary |
Footnotes | Coordinates[1] |
History
editMount Gibson is a former pastoral lease, first granted in 1915 and used mainly for sheep grazing. More recently it was managed for its environmental values. It was acquired by AWC in 2001. Current programs include removal and control of feral animals, rehabilitation of degraded areas, and wildfire management.[2]
Landscape and climate
editMount Gibson contains rocky ranges, floodplains, claypans, salt-lakes and sand-plains. The climate is semi-arid with winter rainfall and hot, dry summers. Average annual rainfall is 250–300 millimetres (9.8–11.8 in).[3]
Ecosystems
editFloristically, Mount Gibson contains elements of both the south-west region and the arid zone, due to its transitional location on the mulga-eucalypt line. Much of the reserve is dominated by Wheatbelt flora, largely cleared elsewhere, including extensive eucalypt woodlands, with stands of salmon gum, York gum and gimlet.[3]
Fauna
editBoth red and western grey kangaroos are found on the reserve, emphasizing the transitional nature of its location. Other mammals are Mitchell's hopping mouse and the little long-tailed dunnart. Significant bird species include malleefowl, Major Mitchell's cockatoo and regent parrot. Western quolls were reintroduced to the sanctuary, initially, from 2016, in a predator-proof site, and later, in 2023 and 2024, outside that site.[4][5]
An indicator of floristic richness is a collection of over 100 species of native bees on the property.[6]
Important Bird Area
editThe sanctuary, along with the neighbouring Charles Darwin Reserve, forms part of the 2,335-square-kilometre (902 sq mi) Mount Gibson and Charles Darwin Important Bird Area (IBA), so identified by BirdLife International principally because it supports populations of malleefowl and western corellas, as well as several other species restricted to either the arid or mallee biomes.[1]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b "IBA: Mount Gibson and Charles Darwin". Birdata. Birds Australia. Retrieved 21 August 2011.
- ^ AWC: Mount Gibson: History Archived 2011-11-17 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ a b AWC: Mt Gibson Archived 2011-11-17 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Pin, Phoebe (2 August 2023). "This native species disappeared 100 years ago, but ecologists are bringing them back from the brink". ABC News. Retrieved 9 August 2023.
- ^ Henville, Chloe (9 November 2024). "White-spotted marsupial back in the Wheatbelt after conservation success". ABC News. Retrieved 10 November 2024.
- ^ AWC: Mount Gibson: Wildlife Archived 2011-11-17 at the Wayback Machine