Schedule 10 - Vegetation Species List - Page 1 Schedule 10 - Vegetation Species List
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RPS V1 - March 2006 Part 9 - Schedules, Schedule 10 - Vegetation Species List - Page 1 Schedule 10 - Vegetation Species List Map 1 - Mainland Vegetation Associations Page 2 - Part 9 - Schedules, Schedule 10 - Vegetation Species List RPS V1 - March 2006 Map 2 - Southern Moreton Bay Islands Vegetation Associations RPS V1 - March 2006 Part 9 - Schedules, Schedule 10 - Vegetation Species List - Page 3 Table 1 - Summary of Species Types Map 2 - Southern Moreton Map 1 - Mainland North Stradbroke Island Bay Islands Vegetation Vegetation Associations Vegetation Associations Associations Part 1 - Rainforest/Vine Part 3 - Blackbutt and Scribbly Part 10 - Brushbox/Banksia Forest - Mainland Gum - Open Forest - Southern Woodland/Headland Part 2 - Blackbutt and Scribbly Moreton Bay Islands Vegetation - North Stradbroke Gum - Open Forest - Mainland Part 6 - Scribbly Gum - Open Island - Point Lookout Area Part 4 - Grey Gum and Forest - Southern Moreton Bay Part 11 - Bloodwood/Bribie Spotted Gum - Open Forest - Islands Island Pine Forest - North Mainland Part 8 - Littoral Stradbroke Island - Amity Part 5 - Scribbly Gum - Open Rainforest/Open Forest - Point Forest - Mainland Mainland and Southern Part 12 - Littoral Part 7 - Queensland Blue Moreton Bay Islands Rainforest/Paperbark Gum Forest/Melaleuca Woodland - North Stradbroke Wetlands - Mainland Island - Dunwich Area Part 9 - Swamp She-Oak including Myora Springs Forest - Mainland Part 13 - Preferred Native Species - Point Lookout - Table A - Ground covers, climbers, ferns and tussock plants Table B - Shrubs Table C - Trees and palms Page 4 - Part 9 - Schedules, Schedule 10 - Vegetation Species List RPS V1 - March 2006 Table 2 - Indigenous Species Specifications Indigenous Specification - See Note 1 Land Type Intent Notes Habitat Habitat Balance Consolidation Link Conservation Restoration Restoration works Reserves works are undertaken in undertaken to 100% 100% 100% accordance with Land managed consolidate necessary by Council, or habitat and specifications, such within the minimise as risk/fire Conservation, environmental management. Environmental impacts. Indigenous species Protection, Rural can include species Non-Urban or not contained in Park Residential species list. This is Zones, or any to ensure that other site used difficult to for environmental propagate or rare or conservation species can be purposes. planted into these areas or plants used for colonisation purposes can be included. Parkland Landscaping Landscaping works designed to are undertaken in Land managed promote the use 80% 80% 60% accordance with by Council, or of indigenous specifications, such within an Open species in as risk Space area informal and management approved as part formal gardens, maintenance of a development and to assist in requirements. application, for creating habitat recreation refuges within the purposes. urban and rural environment. Creeks, wetlands Restoration Restoration design (natural or works provides for artificial) and undertaken to required drainage consolidate 100% 100% 100% maintenance of reserves waterways, infrastructure, risk improve nutrient management and Land managed removal and water movement. by Council, or minimise Indigenous species within an environmental can include species environmental or impacts. Weed not contained in conservation transfer potential species list. This is area approved as minimised to ensure that part of a through use of difficult to development indigenous propagate or rare application, that species only. species can be carries overland planted into these flow or is used for areas or plants stormwater used for management. colonisation purposes can be included. RPS V1 - March 2006 Part 9 - Schedules, Schedule 10 - Vegetation Species List - Page 5 Indigenous Specification 1 Land Type Intent Habitat Habitat Notes Balance Consolidation Link Road Reserves Landscaping DOT/DMR/Energex designed to visibility Planting along reflect the 80% 80% 50% requirements. road reserves surrounding The Street Tree under the control environment to Master Plan is of Council. enhance the reviewed to ensure Shire’s green consistency with image, improve these requirements. street amenity This review will and to assist in provide more creating habitat detailed refuges within the specification as to urban the priority streets environment. for developing habitat linkages. Council Facilities Landscaping designed to Includes all other promote the use 90% 90% 90% Council of indigenous controlled species in facilities not informal and identified above formal gardens, including but not and to assist in limited to depots, creating habitat sewerage and refuges within the water treatment urban plants. environment. Point Lookout Landscaping and NSI restoration works designed to 100% NA NA Includes any promote the use landscaping or of species restoration work indigenous to within areas North Stradbroke under the control Island. of Council or as required as part of a development approval. Other Landscaping Landscape, development designed to Streetscape, Street approvals promote the use 80% 80% 50% Tree and of indigenous Vegetation Includes any species in Management Plans landscaping informal and approved by required as a formal gardens, Council. result of a and to assist in development creating habitat approval under refuges within the IPA other than in urban those environment. circumstances identified above. Note 1 - Indigenous species percentages indicate the minimum requirement across all plant forms. Page 6 - Part 9 - Schedules, Schedule 10 - Vegetation Species List RPS V1 - March 2006 Table 3 - Vegetation Association Species List Part 1 - Rainforest/Vine Forest - Mainland Common Street Scientific Name Form Description Wet Koala Salt Name Tree Acacia bakeri Tree 40m. Cream ball flowers in spring Acacia concurrens Late black wattle Tree Short lived wattle to 8m. Prolific flowers in spring Allocasuarina torulosa Forest she-oak Tree 10m weeping foliage, can turn purplish in colour, corky bark Alphitonia excelsa Red ash, soap tree Tree Grows to 15m. Butterfly food plant. Attractive a grey bark, black rounded fruit Angophora woodsiana Smudgee Tree 10-15m large foliage and fruit. Profuse, cream flowers Araucaria Hoop pine Tree 50m large stately tree pyramid shaped, prickly cunninghamii foliage Commersonia Brown kurrajong Tree Small shade tree to 6 metres. Produces a mass bartramia of small white flowers. Corymbia intermedia Pink bloodwood Tree 20-30m Tree rough tessellated bark, a white/cream flowers. Eucalyptus White mahogany Tree 15-30m White flowers. Grey brown, stringy a acmenoides bark, masses of white flowers Eucalyptus crebra Narrow-leaved red Tree 20-30m White flowers. Cup-shaped capsules. a ironbark Eucalyptus fibrosa Broad-leaved red Tree 15-30m White flowers. Dark furrowed bark a ironbark Corymbia citriodora Spotted gum Tree 20-30m White, strongly fragrant flowers. a Attractive mottled pink/grey/green bark Eucalyptus microcorys Tallowood Tree 30-40m fibrous orange-tinged bark, dense a crown, prolific flowers Eucalyptus propinqua Grey gum Tree 25-30m sheds bark annually, freshly exposed a a bark is bright orange Eucalyptus tereticornis QLD Blue gum Tree 30m smooth bark with white- bluish grey a a a surface Ficus coronata Sandpaper fig Tree Tree to 4 metres. Produces large sandpapery leaves and edible fruit. Butterfly food tree. a Attracts birds. Ficus obliqua Small-leaved fig Tree 15-35m Strangling and aerial roots absent. Yellow to orange, globular fruit Ficus opposita Sandpaper fig Tree 6-10m Young shoots densely covered with soft hairs. Globular or pear-shaped fruit. Flindersia australis Crows ash Tree 20-30m white flowers, distinctive fruit, large a rounded crown Flindersia bennettiana Bennett's ash Tree 15-35m White flowers. Large rounded crown Flindersia xanthoxyla Yellow wood Tree 8m Fast growing White flowers in summer a Gmelina leichardtii White beech Tree 8-15m White with purple & yellow marked flowers. Rounded blue/purple fruit. Large leaved rainforest tree. Guioa semiglauca Native quince Tree Attractive foliage, usually multi-stemmed or low branching form Harpullia hilli Tulipwood Tree 7m black seed enclosed in red aril. Jagera pseudorhus Foam bark Tree Feathery foliage with hairy fruit. Take care not to plant over walkways due to irritable hairs on a fruit Lophostemon Brush box Tree Tall tree to 30m with attractive brown bark. a a confertus Macadamia integrifolia Macadamia nut Tree 20m toothed leaves, edible nut Mallotus philippensis Red kamala Tree 17m attractive green foliage, masses of red fruit Melia azederach White cedar Tree 17m deciduous ferny foliage, white/purple flowers, yellow fruit Neolitsia dealbata White bollygum Tree 8-12m white backed leaves when young, rounded crown Petalostigma Quinine bush Tree Small tree to 5m with attractive black tessellated pubescens bark. Produces yellow fruit. Polyscias elegans Celery wood Tree 15-20m umbrella shaped crown, narrow canopy a palm like in outline Rapanea variabilis Muttonwood Tree 6m Small cream flowers. Globular blue fruit. Sloanea woolsii Yellow carabeen Tree 20-40m Small white flowers. Ovoid, prickly fruits. Tall rainforest tree Sterculia quadrifida Peanut tree Tree 12-18m Dull yellow flowers. Attractive large fruits with orange centres and black seeds. Stenocarpus sinuatus Firewheel tree Tree 20-30m Orange-red flowers. Woody fruits. RPS V1 - March 2006 Part 9 - Schedules, Schedule 10 - Vegetation Species List - Page 7 Common Street Scientific Name Form Description Wet Koala Salt Name Tree Syzygium