TY - JOUR A1 - Bell, Stephen A. J. T1 - Floristic community diversity in derived native grasslands: a case study from the upper Hunter Valley of New South Wales T2 - Cunninghamia : a journal of plant ecology for eastern Australia N2 - Little research has been undertaken on the conservation value of natural and derived native grasslands within the Hunter Valley region of New South Wales. In part, this is due to a lack of rigorous survey and classification of grassland habitats, but also because of the ease with which past studies have deferred to the concept of 'derived grasslands' to describe grassland areas. Given the extent of European occupation of the Hunter Valley over the past 200 years, all grasslands have been impacted upon in one way or another by agricultural activities, and hence all can be considered 'derived'. For one site in the upper Hunter Valley, classification and mapping of grasslands was undertaken using data collected over three Spring seasons from 2009 to 2011, encompassing over 1,000 ha of derived grassland habitat within a wider mosaic of forest and woodland. Numerical classification of 168 sampling plots (each 0.01ha in size) delineated 17 floristic groups (16 communities, one with two sub-communities). Based on the composition of component taxa, 8 of these can be considered primarily of exotic origin, while the remaining 9 are predominantly native. All grasslands have been shaped by past agricultural activities, and all have been collectively referred to previously as derived grasslands. Plant species of significance within the grasslands include the threatened terrestrial orchids Diuris tricolor and Prasophyllum petilum, the threatened forbs Swainsona recta and Thesium australe, and the rare but localised grass Bothriochloa biloba. An additional 19 taxa occur at or extend known distributional limits. The lack of an appropriate existing framework with which to assign conservation value to grasslands in the Hunter complicates any assessment of significance. However, considerable diversity is present within grasslands collectively referred to as 'derived', and effort should be applied in future studies to elucidate community patterns more satisfactorily. Within State and Federal threatened species legislation, there are 30 grassland or derived grassland communities, but only one of these (White Box - Yellow Box – Blakely's Red Gum Grassy Woodland and Derived Native Grassland: EPBC Act) potentially include the grasslands under study here. KW - derived native grasslands KW - numerical classification KW - Hunter Valley Y1 - 2021 UR - http://publikationen.ub.uni-frankfurt.de/frontdoor/index/index/docId/67840 UR - https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:hebis:30:3-678404 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.7751/cunninghamia.2021.004 SN - 0727- 9620 SN - 2200 - 405X VL - 21 SP - 27 EP - 82 ER -