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In this article, we're exploring the unique, robust, and varied Aussie outback animals found in the opal fields. Ready to put your explorer hat on and endeavor into the wild, rugged interior of land that is the Australian Outback? Let's go! Where Is The Australian Outback?The Australian Outback is one of the most remote environments in the world. There are three regions in the Outback, each categorized by climate: The fascinating feature of the Outback is that there's relatively low human activity here. The primary functions include mining the opal fields of Coober Pedy, White Cliffs, Lightning Ridge, Adamooka, and Mintabie. While the Outback's human population makes up less than 5% of the national population, there's a world of animal activity. Miners and visitors frequently spot a variety of wildlife trekking across this rugged terrain. Despite the dry climate, the Outback boasts a thriving ecosystem of flora, fauna, and fascinating creatures! It's no secret that the Outback is a place of mystery and intrigue, but are there dangerous animals in the Outback? Yep, among many others that aren't dangerous at all. That's what makes the Outback such a diverse and exciting place. How many species of animals live in the Outback? Seemingly endless varieties! From herbivores to venomous snakes to hopping kangaroo, let's dive into the amazing Australian outback animals found in the opal fields. What Kinds Of Animals Are In The Outback?You may recognize some of these beloved animals, like Koala and Kangaroo, but there's far more to explore than these iconic Australian animals. KangarooLet's hop right to our first animal on this list of Aussie outback animals: none other than the kangaroo! While kangaroos are often seen in the Outback, this is true across Australia. That's why kangaroos are so commonly associated with Australia in general — they abound. So, what exactly are kangaroos? They are marsupial mammals and a member of the Macropodidae family. Kangaroos are native to Australia and are instantly recognizable when sighted bouncing across the opal fields for their signature leap. These commanding animals have muscular hind legs and a strong tail to balance while they move. And of course, the females carry their babies in their abdomen pouch! The reason kangaroo is one of the most popular Australian Outback animals found in the opal fields is that they easily withstand the dry climate. Additionally, their fast movements enable them to quickly traverse across the Outback in search of food and water. Sand GoannaYou'll find a vast population of lizards in the Outback, starting with the Sand Goanna. Dwelling on the sandy desert floor, these creatures live in habitats of woodlands and grasslands. With their long necks and camouflage skin, they feed on small prey like insects, birds, mice, and even snakes! Frilled-Necked LizardThe frilled-necked lizard is by far one of the most interesting Aussie Outback animals and is more reminiscent of a Jurassic species than a lizard. Encircled in a decorative frilled neck, these tree lizards only come to the ground to find food or protect their territory. Generally, the frilled-necked lizard lives in Northern Australia. However, they've been sighted in the opal fields in the low regions of the Outback. Saltwater CrocodileCrocodiles in the Outback? You read that right! If you came here for dangerous animals in the Outback, saltwater crocodiles deliver. Known as "Salties," these elusive giants stick to the coastal waterways that line the continent and stretch inland via rivers and swamps. While they are extremely dangerous, they're scarcely spotted in the wild, so there aren't that many close encounters. DingosIs it a dog? Is it a coyote? Nope, it's a dingo! These four-legged animals are essentially native wild dogs that can be seen charging across the opal fields. They roam in packs and prey on everything from birds, reptiles, fish, and even kangaroos! Despite the dingo's stamina, the general population is sadly on the decline. If you do happen to sight a dingo, consider it a token of good fortune as they are becoming more scarce every year. KoalasArguably the cutest animal on our list, the koala, is most often sighted in the evening hours between 5 p.m. and midnight. That's when koalas are most active because they're fast asleep for 18-20 hours a day. Koalas live in the Eucalyptus forests and woodlands of Eastern Australia. However, habitat loss is forcing these furry creatures inland. Contrary to their nickname "Koala bear," Koalas aren't bears, but marsupials, like Kangaroos. They also stow their babies in their pouch, who feed on their mother's milk for about seven months before venturing out! Thorny DevilsOne glance at this unique lizard, and you'll be asking, "what on Earth is that?" These pokey lizards live in the arid climates of the Outback and are covered in defensive spikes. As you might guess, their spikes protect them from predators. In a single day, a thorny devil will feed on thousands of tiny ants. Come nightfall, they keep themselves cool from the desert climate by basking in their own dew. Australian Feral CamelsYou've seen camels in Morocco and the Middle East, but did you know they also roam the Outback? That's right, Australian Feral camels thrive in the desert's extreme heat and dry climate. These roaming camels aren't native to Australia but have been on the continent since they were first brought over from India and Afghanistan in the 1800s. Any guesses as to why? If you guessed for toting goods during the colonization of Australia — you're right! Now, they rarely engage with human activity, as they freely roam across the country's dry interior. SnakesWe had to finish the list of Australian Outback animals strong! One of the biggest dangers of the Outback is venomous snakes. Multiple snakes are lurking in the desert bushes and rocky lands, including the Stimson's python, orange-naped snake, mulga snake, curl snake, desert death adder, inland taipan, and speckled brown snake. Mostly, these poisonous snakes feed on mice, insects, birds, and small animals. For the most part, people don't commonly interact with desert snakes, so they aren't as dangerous as they sound because, for the most part, they stay hidden. That said, the Outback is home to the most dangerous snake in the world, The inland taipan, which can wipe out 100 men with one venomous bite. There you have it! We've journeyed to the Australian Outback interior to unveil the curious, intriguing, and in some cases, the dangerous animals that live here. For the most part, Aussie Outback animals keep to themselves. However, every so often, they venture across the opal fields to give onlookers a glimpse at the vast and fascinating world of the Outback! SHOP FOR OPALS
The Outback is the vast heartland of Australia. It includes places of exquisite beauty and wildness. It is an area of extremes, alternately lush and bountiful, harsh and inhospitable. The people and land of the Outback embody much that is most distinctive and characteristic of Australia. Yet while the Outback is quintessentially Australian, it is also a place of international consequence. The Outback has deeply interconnected threads of people and landscapes. Its natural environments support people, jobs, and economies, as well as some of the world’s most diverse and unusual plants and animals. The Outback’s environmental values merit the attention and concern of the nation and the world. However, some of these values are being lost, diminished, or degraded because of particular threats. Managing these risks more effectively, or removing them entirely, would allow for significant progress in ongoing efforts to maintain the environmental, natural and cultural values of the Australian continent as a whole. The Modern Outback: Nature, people and the future of remote Australia explores four intertwined themes:
Although this study is about conservation, its focus is broader than national parks and threatened species. Under consideration is how Australia can create a ‘modern Outback’ while maintaining the natural integrity of its diverse regions. The paper discusses practical approaches that are already improving development and conservation outcomes, and that can be increased in size and scale. This effort represents the first major attempt to focus on the Outback as a coherent entity and to confirm it as the living heart of Australia and a place of international significance. A real place with real needsThe Outback is a vast area spanning 5.6 million km2 and covering more than 70 percent of the Australian continent. By way of comparison, it would encompass more than half of the United States or Europe. The Outback Papers define the Australian Outback as, encompassing all of the Northern Territory, most of Western Australia, South Australia, and Queensland, and the north-western corner of New South Wales. Yet this area has less than 5% of the nation’s population. The concept of the Australian Outback has long been embodied in the mythology, spirit and iconography of Australia. But it is much more than a symbol or romantic notion. It is a distinct place – a coherent region that can be defined geographically. The Outback is markedly different from the more settled parts of Australia. It has a consistent set of characteristics, values, and challenges: remoteness from major population centres, low population density, largely unmodified natural environments and relatively infertile soils. Australians, and much of the world, have long-celebrated many individual parts of the Outback, including Kakadu, Uluru, the central deserts, the Kimberley region and the Lake Eyre Basin. However, these sites have a context and an interconnection, and it is this entirety that forms the Outback. The Outback’s limited development, general remoteness from cities, and low population density are dictated by the environment, in particular its infertile soils and its seasonal or annually erratic rainfall. Most of the Outback has markedly lower rates of plant productivity than in Australia’s more settled temperate areas. As a result, much of its population comprises small and scattered communities, and its environments have therefore remained relatively intact. Also, because the land has had limited potential for commercial enterprises, large areas have remained under Aboriginal management and, more recently, exclusive Aboriginal possession within Australian as well as Indigenous laws. Outback environments may be varied, but they are parts of the same overall fabric – sharing the same fundamental ecological processes and management challenges. A pastoralist in Queensland’s Channel Country faces many of the same issues as an Indigenous ranger working on country in Arnhem Land in the Northern Territory, or a national park manager in Western Australia’s remote Kimberley region. (See Table 1.) A place of national and international environmental significanceThe population of the world is 7.2 billion people. Most of the globe’s land surface has been modified from its natural state for agriculture, intensive grazing, plantations, industry and urban centres. Only a small number of large natural areas remain on Earth … the rapidly diminishing wildlands of the Amazon basin; the boreal forests and tundra of Canada, Alaska and Siberia; the Sahara; and the Australian Outback. A recent global analysis, The Last of the Wild, by the Wildlife Conservation Society and the Center for International Earth Science Information Network, highlighted the fact that only a small number of large natural areas remain on Earth. These are the places of relative wilderness, where ecological processes function normally and movements of wildlife remain largely, or wholly, unfettered by the fragmentation of habitats. These places are likely to endure as strongholds for biodiversity. They include the rapidly diminishing wildlands of the Amazon basin; the boreal forests and tundra of Canada, Alaska and Siberia; the Sahara; and the Australian Outback. In a global context, Australia is significant for biodiversity: its many plants and animals are highly distinctive, with a high rate of endemism arising from its long isolation as a landmass. Of an estimated 11 million species worldwide, about 570,000 are native to Australia. Consequently, it is one of 17 ‘megadiverse’ countries – those with exceptional biodiversity – and along with the United States, is one of only two developed countries that share this designation. Most Australian terrestrial species can be found nowhere else on Earth. For example, more than 80% of Australia’s mammals, reptiles, frogs, and plants, and about 70% of its insects, live only on this continent. Much of this biodiversity is restricted to, or most secure in, the Outback. In addition, the Outback has the world’s largest remaining areas in natural condition for three global biomes:
The Outback has the largest remaining intact tropical savanna on Earth, covering nearly 2 million km2 across northern Australia. The Outback’s 3 million km2 of deserts are among the least modified in the world, and, at 160,000 km2, the Great Western Woodlands in the south-west of the Outback, around Kalgoorlie, is the largest remaining woodland habitat in the world’s temperate Mediterranean climate zones. The Lake Eyre Basin covers almost one-sixth of the continent and is the world’s largest internally draining river system. The drainage basin has one of the few free-flowing arid river systems remaining on Earth. The 1.7 million km2 Great Artesian Basin – the world’s largest groundwater basin – underlies much of the eastern half of the Outback. Offshore, the coastal seas of the tropical north and north-west comprise some of the world’s least disturbed coastal marine environments. Six Outback areas are recognised internationally for their biodiversity significance and are listed as World Heritage sites. Eight Outback sites are listed as wetlands of international importance. The nature of the OutbackThe climate of the Outback is marked by two major features: in northern Australia, a relatively high rainfall driven by regular annual monsoonal (wet-dry) influences; and in central Australia, a relatively low and highly erratic rainfall for which spells of dry years are punctuated by irregular episodes of major rainfall events. The latter phenomenon creates ‘boom–bust’ environments to which many plant and animal species have adapted. Outback vegetation varies broadly, ranging from dense rainforests to gibber (stony) deserts and salt pans almost devoid of plants. However, a small number of vegetation types dominate extensive areas and characterise the Outback:
For a predominantly dry land, there is a surprisingly high diversity of wetland environments, with markedly different patterning and composition in monsoonal areas compared with arid and semi-arid areas. These range from tiny mound springs in central deserts, fed by artesian waters, to broad seasonal wetlands covering hundreds of thousands of hectares during the wet season in northern Australia. In the Outback, where water is usually the main limiting resource for life, these wetlands are often fundamental to maintaining wildlife populations and the productivity of whole landscapes. Many plant and animal species occur extensively across the Outback. Others have very narrow ranges and are highly habitat-specific. Some habitat types and regions have particularly high richness or concentrations of species found only in small areas. For plants, there are important centres of endemism in south-western Australia (in an area that partly overlaps the Outback), the Kimberley, the western Arnhem Land plateau and Cape York Peninsula (particularly the Iron and McIlwraith ranges). Regionally important endemic-rich areas also exist in the central ranges. A network of healthy ecological processes underpins the natural world of the Outback, forming the innate machinery that connects living and nonliving things and keeps nature robust. These processes include fire, flood and drought, and the movement of nutrients, wildlife and water across the landscapes. Overarching all of these are the characteristics of the land: its climate, nutrients and geography. People in the OutbackA defining feature of the Outback is its sparse human population. Although it covers nearly three-quarters of the continent, the Outback supports only about 800,000 residents – less than 5% of the Australian population. Outside Darwin and a few major Outback towns, the population density of less than 0.1 person per km2 represents an extremely low figure compared with the global average population density of 50 people per km2. Aboriginal people make up about one-quarter of the Outback’s population. Although it covers nearly three-quarters of the continent, the Outback supports only about 800,000 residents – less than 5% of the Australian population. There are few cities or large towns in the Outback. Some are residential bases for major mining ventures and function as largely temporary pockets of affluence surrounded by huge regions with few people and meagre economies. There are also about 1,200 small Indigenous communities, of which almost half have a population of fewer than 100 people. The Outback and its residents face many social, economic, and environmental challenges, largely as a result of patchy social and economic foundations. In part, the Outback operates as a colony from which natural resources are exploited and usually exported elsewhere for processing. Mining and government services, including support for natural resource management, dominate the overall economic output of the Outback. However, tourism, fishing, pastoralism, conservation and Indigenous art industries are more dispersed and support a greater number of communities and individuals outside of the cities and major towns. The Outback under pressureSome components are awry in the Outback’s ecological systems. Even in areas remote from signs of people, some native plant and animal species are in decline and others have already disappeared. In many places, the thin lens of topsoil has been spent and the land’s potential productivity diminished. The Outback faces two types of threats: those from extensive degradation and more localised but destructive ones caused by intensive industrial and agricultural projects. Most of the pervasive degrading threats relate to introduced invasive species and changes in fire management regimes. Across vast areas of the Outback, the intricate patterns and processes of fire management by traditional owners have been lost or withdrawn. Much of the land now burns extensively and without purpose or finesse. Feral animals occupy almost all the Outback, and noxious introduced weeds affect conservation and production values in many regions. Fire, invasive species, and weeds occur broadly across the Outback’s landscapes, without respect to state or other boundaries, and affect wildlife as well as cultural and economic values. These pressures are now entrenched and will not be remedied by the local actions of one group with funding that lasts only a few years. To manage these threats, better ways of supporting people working on country are needed. This requires strategic approaches such as long-term security of funding and collaboration among a wide range of organisations. The Outback is facing two types of threats: those from extensive degradation, and more localised but destructive ones caused by intensive industrial and agricultural projects. In some Outback districts, major projects – such as intensive horticulture in the Ord River area and the substantial mining industry in the Pilbara – have transformed environments. In a region as immense as the Outback, it may seem that small pockets of intensive localised development would not affect the natural fabric of the Outback as a whole. However, activities that alter ecosystem processes may have damaging impacts on nature and other economic concerns that extend well beyond the project site. Such actions include extracting water from rivers and aquifers for irrigation and industry, as well as the large-scale removal of bushland for strip-mining or agriculture. Overarching these threats is the risk posed by global warming. Parts of the Outback are experiencing an increase in the number of days with very high temperatures, making an already hot place even less habitable for people and wildlife as well as potentially increasing fire risk. More people caring for countryIn a crowded world, the Outback as one of the rare places that can provide an extraordinary sense of space and of nature relatively untouched by human hands. This depiction, while compelling and refreshing, is also misleading. Aboriginal people settled the northern Outback more than 50,000 years ago, spreading to the arid lands at least 35,000 years ago. Over millennia, these traditional owners developed an intimate understanding of their homeland, its nature and seasons, including its relationship with, and reliance on, fire for regeneration and preservation. National policies and economies over the last 150 years have led to an altered demography and pattern of population dispersion in many Outback landscapes. Much of the Outback has fewer people inhabiting and actively managing the land than at any time over the past 50,000 years. Because too few people are tending these lands, parts of the Outback are faltering. Fewer than 1 in 20 Australians lives in the Outback, and fewer still share the responsibility of managing the millions of square kilometres of country. Much of the Outback has fewer people inhabiting and actively managing the land than at any time over the past 50,000 years. Many Outback landscapes would benefit from more people living and working in them. More land managers would support better management of deeply entrenched threats – particularly fire, feral animals and noxious weeds – and wider implementation of conservation programs that maintain biodiversity, protect the general health of the environment and benefit Outback people and their economies. Establishing a modern OutbackThe Outback is of special value and significance, nationally and internationally. Fundamental to protecting its wildlife and human societies is establishing a modern Outback that values and respects its nature and sustains its people. From its unsettled present-day position, the Australian Outback has a range of potential futures. These may be realised by default and inaction or by deliberate choice. This choice is real and urgent, but to date it has been neglected. In the absence of deliberate choice, ad hoc changes are chipping away at what is distinctive about the Outback and are undermining opportunities to choose a sustainable future. One possible future – more or less the default – would result from ongoing inattention or patchy engagement with little strategic investment. This way would lead to continued environmental degradation, a reduction in the Outback’s importance to the national economy and character, and, in many regions, failing communities. Diminished, too, would be the Outback’s international significance. Another imagined future would be to treat the Outback as a land ripe for unfettered development. The landscape would be divided into exploited and conserved or neglected sectors. An economy highly reliant on intensive agriculture and mining would seek to transform the Outback, with the logistical and environmental constraints of such industrialisation overcome through government subsidies. This approach may create brief economic growth in a few districts, but in the long-term it would cause irredeemable loss to those values that make the Outback so distinctive and important. In the absence of deliberate choice, ad hoc changes are chipping away at what is distinctive about the Outback and undermining opportunities to choose a sustainable future. There is a third vision of the future that recognises the existing inherent value in the Outback and supports development that adapts to and works within the environmental and other constraints presented by remote and dry lands. This approach acknowledges that the Outback must pay its way and that it is in the national interest to further develop some areas. However, the scale of such efforts needs to be carefully managed within the landscape. This future path must, above all else, be sustainable, without damaging the broader ecological function and health that defines and underpins the Outback. Such development must also contribute more specifically to local communities and to broader regional land management, providing the longer-term security for land management activities to grow and function effectively. Such changes are already happening in many districts. Aboriginal ranger groups, working in Indigenous Protected Areas and parks on Aboriginal-owned lands, manage more than 50 million hectares of the Outback – an area more than twice the size of the state of Victoria – using a combination of modern and traditional methods. The growth of Indigenous Protected Areas over the past 10 years, and their beneficial impact on the environment and local communities, has been one of the success stories in the development of remote Australia, particularly for Aboriginal communities. In substantial parts of the Outback, some leases of crown land by grazing enterprises or private individuals are no longer viable as commercial operations. However, some existing leaseholders and new owners – conservation organisations, Aboriginal communities, tourism operators, and individuals – are now using these pastoral leases for enterprises such as tourism and conservation, which can provide better land management and stronger economies in remote areas. These activities currently have an ambiguous legal foundation, as they occur under leases that mandate pastoral use. Further policy changes will be needed to enable the development of jobs, local economies and conservation benefits on a much greater scale across lands currently held as pastoral leases. Those best positioned to lead the creation of a modern Outback are the people who live in, value, and actively care for this vast landscape. A sustainable future for the Outback, built on a firm foundation of government policy and public good, is achievable and desirable. Such a future would maintain, and benefit from, the existing natural and cultural values of the Outback. Much in the old Outback has stagnated over the course of decades of neglect and disregard. There is now a compelling opportunity for the modern Outback – the future Outback – to be shaped more deliberately and thoughtfully. In this respect, the Outback represents one of Australia’s greatest conservation opportunities. Those best positioned to lead the creation of a modern Outback are the people who live in, value, and actively care for this vast landscape. Connecting, supporting and resourcing these stewards, both indigenous and non-indigenous, provides the best opportunity to protect Australia’s largest natural wonder for the benefit and enjoyment of future generations. Such a process must involve a dialogue. The intent of the first Outback Paper, and The Outback Papers series, is to contribute to that discussion and to encourage Australia’s leaders and communities to deeply consider this special place and its future. There is now a compelling opportunity for the modern Outback – the future Outback – to be shaped more deliberately and thoughtfully. In this respect, the Outback represents one of Australia’s greatest conservation opportunities Read the full brief (PDF) Read the full report (PDF) (241 p.)
The Australian Outback is at a crossroads. For Australia and for the world, a positive future must be crafted for this irreplaceable natural treasure.
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