For guidance on planning your revegetation or restoration site (size, shape, species, density of planting) refer to chapters four and five of this site.

Remember: good quality vegetation sites may not need revegetation at all. Appropriate management can encourage natural regeneration.

General Native Vegetation Profile:

Bramah Creek

Creeks, Rivers and Low Country Mid Slopes Hillslopes
LANDFORM Mid Slopes
VEGETATION TYPE White Box – Blakely’s Red Gum – Long-leaved Box – Nortons Box – Red Stringybark grass-shrub woodland
GEOLOGY & SOILS Shallow clay or loamy clay soils derived from fine grained sedimentary, metamorphic or igneous substrates
LOCATION EXAMPLE ???
TREES >8M Eucalyptus albens White Box
Eucalyptus blakelyi Blakely’s Red Gum
Eucalyptus bridgesiana  Apple Box
Eucalyptus goniocalyx Long-leaved Box
Eucalyptus macrorhyncha Red Stringybark
Eucalyptus melliodora  Yellow Box
Eucalyptus polyanthemos Red Box
SHRUBS 1.5 – 8m Acacia buxifolia Box-leaf wattle
Acacia dealbata Silver wattle
Acacia genistifolia Early wattle
Acacia implexa Hickory/Lightwood
Acacia melanoxylon Blackwood
Acacia rubida Red-leaved wattle
Acacia verniciflua Varnish wattle
Acacia vestita Hairy wattle
Dodonaea viscosa subsp. angustissima Narrow leaf hop bush
GROUND COVERS Ammobium craspedioides Everlasting
Arthropodium minus Vanilla Lily
Rytidosperma caespitosa Plains Wallaby Grass
Bulbine bulbosa Bulbine Lily
Carex breviculmis Short-stem Sedge
Carex inversa Knob Sedge
Dianella revoluta var. revoluta Blue Flax Lily
Glycine clandestina Twining Glycine
Lissanthe strigosa subsp. strigosa Peach Heath
Lomandra filiformis subsp. coriacea Wattle Mat-rush
Lomandra multiflora Many-flowered Mat-rush
Melichrus urceolatus Urn Heath
Poa sieberiana Grey Tussock
Pratia purpurascens Austral Bluebell
Pultenaea lapidosa Glandular Bush-pea
Wahlenbergia stricta subsp. stricta Tall Bluebell
Xanthorrhoea glauca Swamp Grass-tree
Xerochrysum bracteatum Golden Everlasting
Xerochrysum viscosum Sticky Everlasting

 

LANDFORM Hillslopes
VEGETATION TYPE Tumbledown Red Gum – Black Cypress Pine – Red Stringybark – Currawang shrubby low woodland & Mugga Ironbark – Inland Scribbly Gum – Red Box shrub/grass open forest
GEOLOGY & SOILS Occurs on grey to red to yellow podzolic loamy sand soils derived from granite and some metamorphic rocks & Occurs on shallow clayey soils derived from mainly metamorphic substrates such as phyllite or arkose
LOCATION EXAMPLE ???
TREES >8M Callitris endlicheri Black Cypress Pine
Allocasuarina verticillata Drooping Sheoak
Brachychiton populneus  Kurrajong (granite hills)
Eucalyptus dives  Broad leaf peppermint 
Eucalyptus goniocalyx Long-leaved Box
Eucalyptus macrorhyncha Red Stringybark
Eucalyptus polyanthemos subsp. polyanthemos Red Box
Eucalyptus sideroxylon Ironbark
SHRUBS 1.5 – 8m Acacia buxifolia Box-leaf wattle
Acacia dealbata Silver wattle
Acacia genistifolia Early wattle
Acacia implexa Hickory/Lightwood
Acacia melanoxylon Blackwood
Acacia rubida Red-leaved wattle
Acacia verniciflua Varnish wattle
Acacia vestita Hairy wattle
Dodonaea viscosa subsp. angustissima Narrow leaf hop bush
GROUND COVERS Rytidosperma monticola Mountain Wallaby Grass
Rytidosperma racemosa var. racemosa Wallaby Grass
Glycine clandestina Twining Glycine
Glycine tabacina Variable Glycine
Gonocarpus tetragynus Matted Raspwort
Goodenia hederacea subsp. hederacea Climbing Goodenia
Hibbertia obtusifolia Grey Guinea Flower
Indigofera australis Austral Indigo
Isotoma axillaris Blue Isotome
Kunzea parvifolia Burgan
Laxmannia gracilis Slender Matrush
Lepidosperma laterale Prickly Sword-sedge
Lomandra filiformis subsp. coriacea Wattle Mat-rush
Melichrus urceolatus Urn Heath
Poa sieberiana Grey Tussock
Wahlenbergia stricta subsp. stricta Tall Bluebell
Xanthorrhoea glauca subsp. angustifolia Swamp Grass-tree