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South-east
Queensland and North-eastern New South Wales
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Mountains
and forests
This is one of the
most fertile, scenic and species-rich regions in
Australia, and has a good climate year-round, World
Heritage rainforests, beautiful sandy
beaches and much more.
It is readily explored from major tourist
destinations and population centres such as Brisbane,
Gold Coast or Byron Bay
The Lamington
National Park and the Border Ranges National Park
together harbour the largest area of rainforest
outside of the tropics, not just in Australia, but
anywhere in the world. An extensive
system of walking tracks which together with the
moderate climate throughout the year and being in
a country relatively free of major political
strife, desperate poverty and large predatory
animals, makes them one of the world’s safest and
most accessible rainforests for visitors of all
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This eastern border
area of New South Wales and Queensland is part of
the Australia's third most biologically diverse
region (after the wet tropics of Far North
Queensland and the Stirling Ranges of southwest
Western Australia). This is partly because of the
Macleay-McPherson overlap, a geographical and
climatic zone including the far southeast corner
of Queensland and the far northeast corner of New
South Wales, resulting in a mingling of tropical
and temperate species of fauna and flora. Many
plant and animal species reach their northern or
southern limits here. Three gigantic
shield volcanoes (Main Range, Focal Peak and Mt
Warning) each erupted for about one million years
between 25 and 22 million years ago, forming an
arc of mountainous country extending from
Toowoomba just west of Brisbane. southwards
towards the border and then eastwards along the
border through Moogerah Peaks, Mt Barney and
Lamington National Parks to Springbrook. These
mountains now trap much of the moist air coming in
from the Pacific Ocean, and the volcanic rocks
have contributed many nutrients to the soil,
endowing the whole area with richer soils and
better rainfall than most of Australia.
Habitats include
cool-temperate forest with Gondwanan-linked
Antarctic beech trees and a profusion of ferns
and mosses on the mountain tops, lush palm
gullies and massive trees in the warm
subtropical rainforest, and “dry rainforest”
(where plants are adapted to winter droughts on
the western slopes, in a "rain shadow" of the
high country to the east, which has first serve
of the clouds rolling in from the Pacific
Ocean). There are also several kinds of eucalypt
forest,
ranging from low mallee heath to tall majestic
forests, as well as sheoak communities fringing
creeks and rivers, mountain heathlands, swamps
and lagoons, and other habitats.
Birds
tend to be active (and often vocal) most of the
day in the rainforests (as compared to more open
habitats where they tend to be quieter after
mid-morning). Over half the bird species
of Australia, including all of its raptors
(eagles, falcons etc.) have been seen in this
region. Migratory birds such as koels,
channel-billed cuckoos, dollarbirds and
rose-crowned fruitdoves and many wading birds
visit regularly, while many others appear less
predictably as nomads or vagrants.
Many others are present year-round.
There are more mammal
species in this region than anywhere else in
Australia, including the country’s richest
diversity of macropods (members of the kangaroo
family), and some of iconic species such as koala
and platypus, as well as five species of gliding
possum and the largest mainland marsupial predator
(spotted-tailed quoll, a small relative of the
Tasmanian devil). A few local mammals are large
and conspicuous (eastern grey kangaroo, whiptail
wallaby) but many are small, shy and nocturnal,
and so rarely seen.
There is a rich diversity also of reptiles,
frogs and other wildlife. Land-snails that
trace their ancestry to Gondwana days are
diverse, and colonies of glow worms (larvae of
fungal gnats, NOT fireflies) can be seen at
night on moist rocky ledges near creeks amid
the fiorest.
Many resident
creatures are found nowhere else, including the
hip-pocket frog (the male shelters the eggs and
tadpoles in groinal skin-folds), Albert’s lyrebird
(one of the world’s greatest mimics), the highly
endangered Coxen's figparrot, the Lamington cray
(a blue or red freshwater crayfish of mountain
streams) and the Richmond birdwing
(Australia's second-largest butterfly).
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Beaches and marine Life
Surfers Paradise
beaches are good for swimming amongst the crowds
near high-rise buildings with night-life and
restaurants. If you prefer quiet stretches of
beach, there are more natural parts of the Gold
Coast( e.g. Burleigh Heads), the Moreton Bay
Islands or parts of the northern New South Wales
coast.
Humpback whales
migrate northwards through here from around May
to their breeding grounds in warm subtropical
and tropical waters, then pass through again
until October or November to return to the rich
feeding grounds of Antarctica. They can often be
seen from the coast on the mainland, or from
Stradbroke or Moreton or other Islands, and
there are several whale-watching tours. Dolphins
are often seen from many parts of the coast.
Dugongs, unusual among sea mammals in being
herbivorous, reach their southernmost limit in
eastern Australia in Moreton Bay.
Sea turtles can be seen from coastal cliffs or
while snorkeling at places such as Cook Island
near Fingal.
Small coral reefs fringe some of the islands, and
the fish life, while not as diverse as the outer
reef, is still colourful and impressive.
There are also beautiful white sandy beaches, some
sheltered and some with pounding surf, rocky
cliffs and intertidal platforms with many kinds of
small creatures adapted to life in this difficult
habitat, and mangroves which provide breeding
grounds for many creatures important to the food
web of fish and other sea creatures.
As the tide recedes on some island beaches,
hundreds of blue soldier crabs emerge from burrows
and trundle across the sand in search of food,
soon heading back to safety before they themselves
become food for shorebirds.
All in all, much to delight the nature-lover! .
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