ACTGOV Plant Community Type PCT Public

Created 23/06/2025

Updated 23/06/2025

OverviewPCTs are spatial polygons that define the type and extent of known vegetation communities within the ACT. PCTs have been further stratified into'zones', which reflect the ecological condition of PCTs relative to benchmark thresholds. The ecological condition of a vegetation community, or a'zone', is assessed using the attributes that define Threatened Ecological Communities (TECs) under the Commonwealth Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 (EPBC Act) and the ACT Nature Conservation Act 2014 (NC Act). Condition zones can be used to identify sites of high quality for conservation protection (e.g. nature reserve) and candidate sites for offsetting. PCTs can also be used to interrogate the spatial distribution and condition of all mapped vegetation areas across the ACT, and are employed as stocktake, planning and on-ground management units to inform the delivery of conservation, restoration and land development programs.ACT plant community typesNaturally occurring native plant community types in the ACT are drawn from Sharp (2007), as implemented in the ACT Vegetation Database (2015), and Armstrong (2013). Each community type is identified by a number, e.g., ACT01, ACT25, known as native vegetation codes. Non-naturally occurring plant communities such as exotic plantations and native plantings have been assigned numbers not present in Sharp (2007), e.g., ACT65, ACT66, ACT 99. Vegetation communities from Armstrong have been assigned an ACT prefix, while retaining the Armstrong numbering, e.g., ACT152 = u152, ACT118 = u118. Refer to Appendix A for the current list of plant communities in the ACT.Determining pre-1750 plant community typePCTs reflect the most likely plant community found prior to European colonisation, except for where they are plantings or plantations. Disturbances caused by agricultural practices and abandonment of land practices can obscure the pre-colonised state. The determination of the most likely pre-European plant community found at a present-day site is informed by signs such as the presence and type of native species; the growth form and density of remnant canopy trees; the presence of stags or stumps; the presence and species of midstorey shrubs and trees; the floristic composition of the groundstorey; landscape position and other geographical features such as elevation, aspect, soils, apparent hydrology etc.Mapping PCTs and ecological condition zonesThe boundaries of each PCT at a site are accurately mapped on-ground by walking the boundaries and recording them using hand-held GPS and marking directly on to high resolution orthorectified aerial photograph field maps. Once PCTs are mapped, a further assessment of condition is undertaken by dividing a PCT into homogenous'zones'based on the structure (presence or absence of mature canopy and regeneration), floristic composition (ground story dominance and forb diversity) and overall quality('intactness') of the vegetation. A simple matrix based on the criteria for conservation protection under the EPBC or NC Acts is used to categorise the condition of PCTs of grasslands (Table 1) and woodlands (Table 2 and 3). Although initially used to identify TECs for protection and/or offsetting, PCT zoning has been extended to other plant communities in the ACT and is considered a general measure of condition. There are currently 32 recognised ACT PCTs. To date, not all have been spatially mapped, with efforts focused on TECs facing higher threats at lower elevations, which are more likely to meet EPBC and NC Act status.Grasslands and woodland/forest PCTs are assessed using different zone criteria. Two components are used to assess the condition of grasslands: ground layer nativeness and forbs; whereas woodlands have four components, due to the additional components of mature trees and regeneration of tree species. The highest condition scores end in the numeral one (e.g. PCT 1.1 or PCT 25.1.1). Table 4 contains a worked example to interpret condition zones for Box-Gum Grassy Woodlands. Note that the highest condition zone does not represent a pristine environment, but one that meets baseline listing criteria.Please also see ACT PCT Code and Zone Lookup TablesWoodland zone matrixWoodlandMature Trees +Mature Tree –Regen +Regen –Regen +Regen –Native Cover+Forb Div. +16.1.116.1.316.2.116.2.3Forb Div. –16.1.216.1.416.2.2*16.2.4Native Cover–Forb Div. +16.3.1'16.3.3'16.4.116.4.3Forb Div. –16.3.2'16.3.4'16.4.216.4.4Grassland zone matrixGrasslandGroundstory DominanceNative Forb DiversityPCT ZoneEPBC of NC Act definitionNative Cover+Forb Div. ++ (High - Very High)1.1EPBC, NCForb Div. + (Mod - High)1.2EPBCNative Cover >50% Themeda, Poa OR Carex1.2EPBCForb Div. – (Low)1.3Native Cover–Forb Div. + (Mod)1.4Forb Div. – (Low)1.4Table 1 Vegetation zone designations for grassland communitiesGroundstorey dominanceNative Forb DiversityPCT Condition ZoneType of exotic dominanceEPBC or NC Act(if relating to PCT01)NativeCover of all native understorey plants is greater than the cover of perennial exotics plantsAt least 12 non-grass native species OR At least 3 indicator species OR Floristic Value Score more than equal to 6.5PCT .1_EPBC, NCFloristic Value Score more than equal to 5 but < 6.5 OR Floristic Value Score < 5 AND 8 non-grass native species OR 2 indicator species presentPCT .2A_EPBC> 50% foliage cover of Themeda triandra, Poa labillardieri OR Carex bichenovianaPCT .2B_EPBCFloristic Value Score < 5PCT .3__ExoticCover of all native understorey plants is less than the cover of perennial exotics plantsFloristic Value Score more than equal to 5 but < 6.5 OR Floristic Value Score < 5 and 8 non-grass native species OR 2 indicator species presentPCT .4A__Floristic Value Score < 5PCT .4BPastoral and Agricultural_Floristic Value Score < 5PCT .4CStock camp_Floristic Value Score < 5PCT .4DNoxious weed species_Floristic Value Score < 5PCT .4EUnknown_Table 2 Vegetation zone designations for woodland and forest communities with the groundstorey dominated by native speciesGroundstorey dominanceMature characteristic trees across the patchRegeneration of characteristic canopy (<5 cm DBH)Native Forb DiversityPCT Condition ZoneEPBC or NC Act(if relating to PCT16)Native Cover of all native understorey plants is greater than the cover of perennial exotic plantsMore than 4 trees > 40cm DBHRegen presentmore than equal to 12 species AND one important species.; +/- disturbance sensitive speciesPCT .1.1EPBC, NC< 12 disturbance tolerant species onlyPCT .1.2EPBC, NCRegen absentmore than equal to 12 species AND one important species.; +/- disturbance sensitive speciesPCT .1.3EPBC, NC< 12 disturbance tolerant species onlyPCT .1.4EPBC, NCLess than 4 trees > 40cm DBHRegen presentmore than equal to 12 species AND one important species.; +/- disturbance sensitive speciesPCT .2.1EPBC, NC< 12 disturbance tolerant species onlyPCT .2.2EPBC, NCRegen absentmore than equal to 12 species AND one important species.; +/- disturbance sensitive speciesPCT .2.3EPBC, NC< 12 disturbance tolerant species onlyPCT .2.4_Table 3 Vegetation zone designations for woodland and forest communities with the groundstorey dominated by exotic speciesExotic Cover of all native understorey plants is less than the cover of perennial exotics plantsMore than 4 trees > 40cm DBHRegen presentmore than equal to 12 species AND one important species.; +/- disturbance sensitive speciesPCT .3.1NC1< 12 disturbance tolerant species onlyPCT .3.2NC1Regen absentmore than equal to 12 species AND one important species.; +/- disturbance sensitive speciesPCT .3.3NC1< 12 disturbance tolerant species onlyPCT .3.4NC1Less than 4 trees > 40cm DBHRegen presentmore than equal to 12 species AND one important species.; +/- disturbance sensitive speciesPCT .4.1_< 12 disturbance tolerant species onlyPCT .4.2_Regen absentmore than equal to 12 species AND one important species.; +/- disturbance sensitive speciesPCT .4.3_< 12 disturbance tolerant species onlyPCT .4.4_NC1 Zone 3.1 to 3.4 can meet NC Act definition of listed community if there is a characteristic canopy of Yellow Box and/or Blakely Red Gum (i.e. not single isolated tree or clump) (Capital Ecology 2023).Table 4 Example of PCT zone mapping codes and their interpretation for a Box-Gum Grassy Woodland (PCT16).Plant Community TypeCondition zonePCT Zone Interpretation161.116.1.1Eucalyptus melliodora – E. blakelyi Tableland Grassy WoodlandMore than 50% native understoreyMature trees presentTree regeneration present12 or more forb species AND one important species.; with or without disturbance sensitive speciesRemnant Box-Gum Grassy Woodland in good condition that meets the TEC criteria under EPBC and NC Acts.4.416.4.4More than 50% exotic ground coverMature trees absentTree regeneration absentLess than 12 disturbance tolerant species onlyCleared Box-Gum Grassy Woodland in poor condition; ‘derived native grassland’.Offsets Crosswalk CodesMature Trees +Mature Tree –Regen +Regen –Regen +Regen –Native Cover+Forb Div. +16.116.316.4Forb Div. –16.216.5Native Cover–Forb Div. +Forb Div. –16.616.716.8

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Title ACTGOV Plant Community Type PCT Public
Language English
Licence Not Specified
Landing Page https://data.gov.au/data/dataset/46dd9c40-739f-4b76-b625-e7fc7ee249aa
Remote Last Updated
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ACT Government Geospatial Data Catalogue (ACTmapi)
spatialdata@act.gov.au
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Map data © OpenStreetMap contributors
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This dataset was originally found on ACTMAPi "ACTGOV Plant Community Type PCT Public". Please visit the source to access the original metadata of the dataset:
https://actmapi-actgov.opendata.arcgis.com/datasets/ACTGOV::actgov-plant-community-type-pct-public