Lesueur National Park

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Lesueur National Park
IUCN category II (national park)
Nearest city Jurien Bay
Coordinates 30°08′04″S 115°06′02″E / 30.13444°S 115.10056°E / -30.13444; 115.10056Coordinates: 30°08′04″S 115°06′02″E / 30.13444°S 115.10056°E / -30.13444; 115.10056
Area 27,235 ha (67,300 acres)[1]
Established 1992
Governing body Department of Environment and Conservation
Official website

Lesueur National Park is a national park straddling the boundary between the Wheatbelt and Mid West regions of Western Australia (Australia), 211 km north of Perth. The park was gazetted in 1992. It includes a mesa known as Mount Lesueur, and supports a highly diverse flora.

Flora

Open Eucalyptus woodland with a diverse understorey

Lesueur National Park lies in the Geraldton Sandplains bioregion, which is characterised by scrubby heath with a high number of plants from the Proteaceae family.

Vegetation in the park is structurally complex, with patches of woodland amongst shrublands.[2]

There are over 900 indigenous plant species in the park, many of which are endemic.[2] Rare or threatened species include the Mount Lesueur Grevillea, Forrest's Wattle, the Lesueur Hakea and the Laterite Mallee.

The park is the northern limit for Jarrah and Mountain Marri, both of which grow as mallees instead of the more usual tall tree form.

Lesueur National Park is under threat from the effects of Phytophthora dieback, a disease which kills plants and is spread through movement of infected soil or water. [3]

See also

  • Protected areas of Western Australia

References

  1. Department of Environment and Conservation 2009–2010 Annual Report. Department of Environment and Conservation. 2010. p. 48. ISSN 1835-114X. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 "Management Plan:Lesueur National Park and Coomallo Nature Reserve1995 - 2005". Department of Conservation and Land Management. 1995. Retrieved 6 December 2009. 
  3. Dunne, Chris; Kilgour, Sharon (2005). Managing Phytophthora Dieback in Bushland (in English) (3 ed.). Perth, Western Australia: WWF Australia. p. 48. Retrieved 7 August 2011. 

External links


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