SoE2020: Fragmentation of remnant vegetation

Created 11/11/2025

Updated 11/11/2025

In the most recent 2015–2017 period, the New England Tablelands has experienced the greatest patch density increase (13.4%) and greatest remnant core areas density loss (-2%). The Gulf Plains experienced the greatest increase in the frequency of edges (226), the Brigalow Belt the greatest increase in patches (316) and the Mulga Lands the greatest fragmentation of core areas into smaller core units (400). These examples demonstrate that fragmentation has many guises and they do not necessarily correlate with rates of clearing.

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Additional Info

Field Value
Title SoE2020: Fragmentation of remnant vegetation
Language English
Licence Not Specified
Landing Page https://data.gov.au/data/dataset/94681c9f-0743-4057-8316-a6b3694d9a9d
Remote Last Updated 25/09/2023
Contact Point
Environment, Tourism, Science and Innovation
OpenData@des.qld.gov.au
Reference Period 03/09/2021
Geospatial Coverage Queensland
Data Portal Queensland Government

Data Source

This dataset was originally found on Queensland Government "SoE2020: Fragmentation of remnant vegetation". Please visit the source to access the original metadata of the dataset:
https://www.data.qld.gov.au/dataset/soe2020-fragmentation-of-remnant-vegetation