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Updated: July 28, 2010
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Introducing the Great Western Woodlands
A global treasure in our backyard

- The Great Western Woodlands area in South-Western WA
Equivalent to Africa’s Serengeti or South America’s Amazon, the Great Western Woodlands is an internationally significant area of great biological richness.
The area covers almost 16 million hectares, (more than twice Tasmania) and is a continuous band of vegetation spanning the edge of the Western Australian ‘Wheatbelt’ to the Mulga country in north - the inland deserts to the northeast and the Nullarbor plain to the east.
Click here to see pictures of the Great Western Woodlands.
Extraordinarily Biodiverse
The Great Western Woodlands is an Arc for rare and threatened plants and animals, containing thousands of species found nowhere else on the planet.
Amazingly, more than 20% of all Australia’s flora species and 30% of Australia’s eucalypt species are found in the Great Western Woodlands area.
Dozens of rare and threatened animals such as the Chuditch, Malleefowl, Woylie, Red-tailed Phascogale and White-Striped Freetail bat call this region home.
Unfortunately Australia has the highest rate of mammal extinctions in the world and, nationally, bird numbers are declining rapidly - especially woodland birds.
That’s one reason why big intact regions like this one are so important.

- The Western Quoll or Chuditch. Photo: Lochman Transparencies

The Great Western Woodlands is threatened
Poor fire management, feral animals, weeds, and habitat fragmentation due to ad hoc infrastructure and development are all combining to have a negative and deteriorating affect on this landscape.
Without a science-based, best-practice plan for managing the Great Western Woodlands, which ensures both conservation and sustainable resource use, we may lose one of the worlds last great wild places.
An intact landscape
Large intact functioning ecosystems are vitally important for healthy environment & communities. The Great Western Woodlands is the largest remaining intact area temperate Woodland in the World!
- Lake Johnston GWW. Photo: Barbara Madden
In other areas of southern Western Australia and eastern Australia, similar ecosystems have been replaced with agricultural lands. Disturbingly over 35% of the Mediterranean habitat in Australia has been cleared for agriculture and urban development.
In fact, landscapes that span equivalent climatic conditions in South America, North America, Africa, Asia and Europe have all experienced a heavy human footprint.
Globally more than 30% of the Mediterranean biome has been modified for urban and agriculture development. Less than 5% of the remaining habitats are protected.
In the Great Western Woodlands we have the opportunity to retain a functioning environment with most of its species still present, or able to be reintroduced.
Reconnecting country - Gondwana Link

- Map of the 'Gondwana Link' in South western Australia.
The Great Western Woodlands forms the Eastern most connection of GondwanaLink.
GondwanaLink is a visionary project which aims to re-connect the now fragmented country form the karri and jarrah forests of the Margaret River area through the south west corner to the Great Western Woodlands and into the inland deserts.
Click here to visit the GondwanaLink official website.
We are working together for the benefit of people, nature and future generations
The Great Western Woodlands Collaboration – an alliance of four conservation organisations - is working with the communities and stakeholders of the Woodlands to have this area protected, managed and promoted.
Learn more
- Click here to receive Great Western Woodland email updates
- Click here to download report on The Extraordinary nature of GWW
- Click here to download the Green Carbon in the Great Western Woodlands report
- Click here to help conserve conserve our wild places
- Call (08) 6460 4936 for info from the Great Western Woodlands Collaboration
For more information, please contact:
Great Western Woodlands Campaigner
The Wilderness Society WA Inc GWW
City West Lotteries House
2 Delhi St
West Perth, WA, 6005
Phone: 08 6460 4936

