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Introducing The Plants And Animals Of The Wet Tropics
About 3,000 plant species from 210 families are
found in the Wet Tropics. Twelve out of the world's 19 families
of primitive flowering plants grow here and within these families,
there are at least 50 species found only in the Wet Tropics. While
many of the plants
in the rainforest have been around for millions of years, learn
about ferns that have been around for much longer than that. Learn
how the Area provides an unparalleled living record of the ecological
and evolutionary processes that shaped the flora and fauna of Australia
over the past 415 million years.
Learn
more about the mammals,
reptiles, freshwater
fish, birds
and frogs of the
World Heritage Area. This area is home to about a third of Australia's
315 mammal species - 13 of these species are found nowhere else
in the world. They include unique green possums, ringtail possums,
fierce marsupial cats, rare bats, tree-kangaroos, a rat-kangaroo,
a melomys and an antechinus. There are many spectacular insects
to see in Australia's Tropical Rainforests. Do you know what a peripatus
is? Read on to find out about the invertebrates
that inhabit these forests including, crustaceans, worms, beetles,
ants, spiders, mites, scorpions, amblypygids, centipedes and millipedes,
not to mention the snails and slugs. While the Wet Tropics region
is home to a quarter of Australia's frogs and a little over a third
of the country's freshwater fish, it is also home to nearly half
of Australia's birds - that's more than 370 different species.
There are so many different things to see
in our forests that many interesting but demure species go unnoticed.
See some of the colourful forms of mushrooms
and fungi that inhabit the rainforest floor. They play an important
role but for most of their lives, they remain hidden inside rotting
wood or in the soil - only making a cameo appearance when it is
time to reproduce.
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