A contemporary assessment of land condition in the Northern Gulf region of Queensland


Autoria(s): Shaw, K.A.; Rolfe, J.W.; English, B.H.; Kernot, J.C.
Data(s)

2007

Resumo

A framework using assessments of soil condition, pasture composition and woodland density was applied to describe 14 grazing land types as being in A (100% of original carrying capacity), B (75%), C (45%) or D (20%) condition. We assessed the condition of 260 sites, principally along public and some station roads, to provide a benchmark for current land condition. Land types were also assigned relative grazing values between 10 (best) and 0, reflecting soil fertility and potential biomass production. The method identifies particular, 'at-risk' land types for priority investment of resources, while the rationale behind assessments might point to management interventions to improve the condition of those land types. Across all land types, 47% of sites were in A condition, 34% in B condition, 17% in C condition and only 2% in D condition. Seventy-five percent of land types with grazing values >5 were in A or B condition, compared with 88% for those with grazing values ?5. For Georgetown granites, only 27% of sites were in A or B condition, with values for other land types being: alluvials 59%, black soils 64% and red duplex soils 57%, suggesting that improving management of these land types is a priority issue. On land types with high grazing value, the major discounting factor was pasture composition (72% of sites discounted), while increasing woodland density was the main discount (73% of sites discounted) on low grazing value land types.

Identificador

Shaw, K.A. and Rolfe, J.W. and English, B.H. and Kernot, J.C. (2007) A contemporary assessment of land condition in the Northern Gulf region of Queensland. Tropical Grasslands, 41 (4). pp. 245-252.

http://era.daf.qld.gov.au/1260/

Publicador

Tropical Grassland Society of Australia Inc.

Relação

http://era.daf.qld.gov.au/1260/

Palavras-Chave #Rangelands. Range management. Grazing #Soils. Soil science
Tipo

Article

PeerReviewed