The community is found in smooth slopes of low-level hills, and in wide valleys with elevations from 50 m (160 ft) to more than 500 m (1,600 ft) above sea level, covering most of the Mid North area and Clare Valley. They are distinguished from other grasslands of southeastern Australia because they are frequently dominated by Lomandra species (Iron-grasses) which are tussocks in the Asparagaceae[note 1] family, rather than actual grasses.[4]
Geography
The vegetation community is mostly found within the Flinders-Lofty Block Bioregion, with minor presence in the Kanmantoo, Eyre Yorke Block and Murray Darling Depression Bioregions. The community once spread over an area estimated at 750,000 to 1,000,000 hectares (1,900,000 to 2,500,000 acres) between Clare and Burra to Jamestown, Peterborough and to west of Carrieton, but has since been reduced to around 5,000 hectares due to agriculture and land clearing. 780 hectares have been used in conservation parks and private heritage agreements, with minor parts remaining in several reserves, including road and rail reserves, gullies, ridges and on slopes of hills. The residue patches alter in size from less than 1 hectare to large blocks of 100 ha or more.[1]
They area distributed in the transition zone between the higher rainfall woodlands and the drier Mallee areas at the base of the eastern Mount Lofty Ranges to the Mallee, and from Callington northwards to Terowie.[5]
The mean annual rainfall ranges from 280–600 mm (11–24 in) across the community with a rainfall peak in winter. The distribution of the Iron-grass Natural Temperate Grassland is located within various Aboriginal Nations, including lands of the Ngarrindjeri, Peramangk, Kaurna, Narrunga, Nukunu and Ngadjuri people.[1]
^Chase, M.W.; Reveal, J.L. & Fay, M.F. (2009), "A subfamilial classification for the expanded asparagalean families Amaryllidaceae, Asparagaceae and Xanthorrhoeaceae", Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 161 (2): 132–136, doi:10.1111/j.1095-8339.2009.00999.x