Plant and animal life

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Also known as: Van Diemen’s Land

In general, the wettest areas have temperate rainforests, largely of beech or myrtle; areas having 30 to 60 inches (760 to 1,520 mm) of precipitation annually support good-quality eucalypt forests, and the drier areas carry poor-quality eucalypt forests or savanna woodland. In certain areas, particularly in the forests of the south and southwest, an almost impenetrable thicket known as horizontal scrub develops. This is caused by the growth of a remarkable small tree called the horizontal (Anodopetalum biglandulosum). The slender trunk of the tree falls over under its own weight, and from it branches arise that behave in the same way. On the mountain plateaus are found many plants having subantarctic affinities. These include Tasmania’s only deciduous tree or shrub, the myrtle beech, and certain cushion plants. Rainforests would be more widespread in the absence of fires, most of which are caused by natural forces. There are softwood plantations in the Fingal and Scottsdale areas and inland from the northwest coast. Other vegetation zones include the sedge land along the west coast, the high moorlands, and the coastal heaths of the far northwest, the far northeast, and the Bass Strait islands.

Animal life is virtually absent from the true rainforests but abounds in the extensive eucalypt forests. Birds include honeyeaters, black jays, masked plovers, black magpies, black cockatoos, and various parrots. Among the mammals are wallabies, brushtail and ringtail possums, and marsupial carnivores—the various “native cats,” including the spotted-tailed and eastern quoll, and the Tasmanian devil. The thylacine (Tasmanian tiger) became extinct in the 1930s. The sedge land and moorlands are distinctive for wombats, and the coastal heaths for green rosellas, platypuses, and short-nosed echidnas.

People

Population composition

Within Australia, the population of Tasmania has a distinctive composition both by birthplace and by ethnic heritage. Of all the states, Tasmania has the highest proportion born in Australia—nearly nine-tenths of the population—and the lowest proportion born elsewhere in the world. The majority of the residents are of British descent. However, non-British immigration has increased since the late 20th century, though it is not as pronounced as in other states.

The ethnic origins of the population are reflected in religious affiliations. Compared with Australia as a whole, Tasmania has long had a greater proportion of Anglicans and a smaller proportion of Roman Catholics, although the latter community grew somewhat after World War II. Among the smaller religious groups to have had long-term strength in Tasmania are the Society of Friends (Quakers), Dutch Calvinists, Brethren, and various other autonomous groups. In tandem with trends in the rest of the country, however, the number of Tasmanians adhering to no specific religion has continued to rise, and the strength of traditional churches has continued to decline.

Settlement patterns

The inhospitable terrain of much of Tasmania naturally has had much influence on settlement patterns. The nomadic original Tasmanians have left a few archaeological traces, including geometric designs on exposed rock surfaces and evidence of cremations and corroborees, or ceremonial gatherings. European settlers have left their imprint largely through economic activity—in the mining settlements of the west, in the intensive cropping or dairying of the northern coastal belt and the southeast lowlands, and in the dryland sheep farming of most of the eastern sector. The uninhabited southwestern part of the island, one of the three great temperate wilderness areas remaining in the Southern Hemisphere, collectively was designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1982.

Historically, the pattern of rural settlement has differed by region, with contrasts stemming from farm size and the length of settlement. In general, the older settled areas, including the midlands between Launceston and Hobart, the central north, the east coast, and the southeast, had larger properties, dispersed homesteads, buildings often built of stone or brick, some Georgian architecture, and nucleated villages laid out on a grid. Areas with more precipitation that have been settled since 1850, chiefly the northwest, the northeast, and the Huon River valley region, generally had small farms, buildings mostly of weatherboard, and houses and villages mainly aligned narrowly along roads. Villages in all areas typically had a post office and store, as well as a primary school, public hall, church, service station, and transport services.

Although the state has remained somewhat less urbanized than its mainland counterparts, Tasmania’s cities and metropolitan areas have been growing rapidly, exhibiting a dispersed pattern of peripheral growth in three major urban regions. The state capital, Hobart, at the foot of Mount Wellington on the Derwent estuary, is a major port and the leading industrial centre. It is also the metropolitan focus for the southeast, the upper Derwent, the Central Plateau, the midlands south of Oatlands, and the east coast south of Swansea. Launceston, at the head of the Tamar River valley, is a secondary administrative centre and the hub of the state’s transport network; it is also the home of several important engineering industries. Its sphere of influence extends westward to Deloraine and incorporates the entire north and northeast. The third region centres on both Burnie and Devonport and includes the northwest and the west coast (Queenstown and Rosebery area). Regional pride has always been an extremely potent force in Tasmanian life and politics.

Demographic trends

Tasmania has long maintained a higher birth rate than most other states. Birth rates have generally been lower in the cities than in the smaller towns and rural areas. Death rates have remained fairly constant. Infant mortality rates in Tasmania are roughly comparable to the Australian average.

After World War II Tasmania experienced in-migration from other states and overseas, but since about 1960 the out-migration resumed to the mainland, consisting primarily of young people entering the workforce. This has been accompanied by a pronounced internal rural-to-urban migration, largely because of the increasing scale of farming and the mechanization of agriculture. Tasmania thus differs from the mainland in having the smallest proportion of population in the labour force and the lowest growth rate of any state. A drop in birth rate in the late 20th century indeed brought Tasmania’s population growth to a halt by 2000, though the number of births increased slightly in the early 21st century.

Because more than two-fifths of the island—comprising areas in the west and the south—is too rugged and too wet for agriculture, the population is largely confined to the northern and the southeastern regions, which are connected to an isolated cluster of settlements on the west coast by the sparsely settled midlands. Hobart and the surrounding area has nearly two-fifths of the state’s population, while most of the remainder of Tasmania’s residents are distributed more or less equally between the greater Launceston and Burnie-Devonport areas. No other Australian state has had a population so evenly distributed between the capital city, other urban centres, and rural areas; the nearest equivalent has been Queensland. However, increased urbanization after 1950 modified this pattern.