Abstract

SummaryMeeting all four natural criteria for United Nations World Heritage listing, the Wet Tropics World Heritage Area that covers 61% of the remaining vegetation of the bioregion conserves, on a biodiversity basis, habitats ‘containing threatened species of outstanding universal value from the point of view of science or conservation’. As discussed in an accompanying paper by the same authors, the Wet Tropics Bioregion faces a level of habitat change unprecedented in threat and scale and manifested in the transition of sclerophyll forests and woodlands to closed forest habitats, a change attributable to the absence of fire or reduction in its frequency.The implications of habitat change for certain threatened species and ecosystems present a challenge to conserving the ark of biodiversity the Wet Tropics represents. Evidence indicates that the dominant reason for these changes in vegetation patterns is the reduction in fire or its exclusion across a bioregion with the highest rainfall of the nation. It is clear that the bioregion is suffering and with present trends, will continue to suffer, a major loss of habitat diversity.

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