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On the ecology, distribution and conservation status of Vittadinia blackii (Asteraceae) in Australia
(2011)
Distribution records of Vittadinia blackii (family Asteraceae) across southern Australia show the species has a strong and moderately common presence across a broad range of climate zones and sites in South Australia, but a much more restricted occurrence in other mainland state’s. Using the IUCN criteria, adopted by the separate state regulatory authorities vested with listing threatened species, Vittadinia blackii is considered to be not threatened in South Australia, but endangered in Western Australia, Victoria and New South Wales.
The arid and semi-arid southwest of New South Wales has received disproportionately less attention from botanists than other similar-sized geographic regions of the state. Recent work has extended our knowledge of three extremely rare plant taxa from this part of the state. Zygophyllum compressum (Zygophyllaceae) and Elachanthus glaber (Asteraceae) are restricted to gypseous rises within active saline groundwater discharge complexes with limited distribution in southwest New South Wales and occur within the plant community “Gypseous shrubland on rises and semi-arid plains” (ID253) which is listed as threatened (vulnerable) within the state. Eremophila crassifolia (Myoporaceae) is restricted to a few plants on a roadside and adjacent mallee vegetation approximately 35 km east of Wentworth. Based on IUCN criteria it is suggested that Eremophila crassifolia is critically endangered and Zygophyllum compressum and Elachanthus glaber endangered in New South Wales and all should be listed under the NSW Threatened Species Conservation Act 1995.