Logo image
Aquatic fauna of the Warren bioregion, south-west Western Australia: Does reservation guarantee preservation?
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Aquatic fauna of the Warren bioregion, south-west Western Australia: Does reservation guarantee preservation?

K.M. Trayler, J.A. Davis, P. Horwitz and D.L. Morgan
Journal of the Royal Society of Western Australia, Vol.79(4), pp.281-291
1996
pdf
Aquatic_fauna_of_the_warren.pdfDownloadView
Published (Version of Record) Open Access

Abstract

The Warren Bioregion, in the extreme south-west of Western Australia, has a unique assemblage of aquatic invertebrates, fish and amphibians. Current literature indicates that 192 fully described species have been collected, of which 10 invertebrate, 1 fish and 6 frog species could be considered locally endemic. We estimate that secure nature reserves (A-Class and National Parks) in the Warren Bioregion provide a refuge for 86% of the aquatic faunal elements. Reservation alone, however, may not be sufficient to protect certain of the aquatic fauna. Adverse impacts occurring within catchments, including erosion and deposition of sediment, salinization, fire, land clearing, the presence of dams and the introduction of exotic fish, may adversely affect the aquatic fauna within a reserve. Management of protected habitats must ensure that only anthropogenic activities which are sympathetic to the long term persistence of all elements of the biota occur within, and adjacent to, the reserve systems

Details

Metrics

344 File views/ downloads
112 Record Views
Logo image