Litter Cover
Benchmark Value
Scoring Curve
The scoring engine could not generate a curve for this benchmark context. The primary form is CompositeFramework, but the benchmark data may be missing required fields (e.g., optimal range bounds for an OptimalRange benchmark). This is typically a data quality issue in the benchmark pipeline.
Evidence & Context
A minimum of 70% total ground cover is the standard widely recommended and applied by land management authorities to control sheet and rill erosion caused by overland water flow.
Total ground cover percentage required to prevent accelerated water erosion on slopes.
This benchmark represents the minimum total ground cover percentage needed to prevent erosion on slopes in the Arid Mountain Ranges & Uplands biome under conservation management.
This threshold is the most scientifically defensible lower critical threshold for maintaining basic ecological integrity in the biome.
Sources (1)
Increasing Awareness and Knowledge of Improving ... - AIR EP, accessed July 23, 2025
View SourceSupporting Sources (27)
Additional references from the underlying research that informed this benchmark.
Knowledge Review - WaterConnect, accessed July 22, 2025,
View Source(PDF) Mineral Nutrition of Plants in Australia's Arid Zone - ResearchGate
View Source(PDF) Modelling Bushfire Fuel Hazard Using Biophysical Parameters - ResearchGate, accessed August 2, 2025
View SourceTERN (2021) Summary of TERN Plots in the Pilbara, Western Australia, April 2015, accessed August 2, 2025
View SourceAusPlots Rangelands Survey Protocols Manual
View SourceSparrow, B. et al. (2020). AusPlots Rangelands Survey Protocols Manual. Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network.
View SourceManagement Standards and Procedures for timber harvesting operations in Victoria’s State forests
View SourceLeakiness: A new index for monitoring the health of arid and semiarid landscapes using remotely sensed vegetation cover and elevation data | Request PDF - ResearchGate, accessed August 2, 2025
View SourceRoot Structure and Functioning for Efficient Acquisition of Phosphorus: Matching Morphological and Physiological Traits
View SourceFire frequencies for Western Sydney's woodlands: indications from vegetation dynamics - Research Profiles and Repository, accessed August 2, 2025
View SourceCan trophic rewilding reduce the impact of fire in a more flammable world? - Journals, accessed August 2, 2025
View Sourcedata.csiro.au, accessed August 2, 2025
View SourceLudwig, J.A., Bastin, G.N., Chewings, V.H., Eager, R.W., and Liedloff, A.C. (2005). Clearing savannas for use as rangelands in Queensland: Altered landscapes and water-erosion processes. Rangeland Journal, 27(2), 135-149.
View SourceGrazing-management-for-soil-carbon-in-Australia-A-review.pdf - University of Tasmania, accessed April 29, 2025,
View SourceIndicators and benchmarks for wind erosion monitoring, assessment and management - USDA ARS, accessed August 2, 2025
View SourceGrassy eucalypt woodland of the Victorian volcanic plain - listing advice, accessed August 9, 2025,
View SourceNorfolk Island Environmental Assessment Executive Summary, accessed August 3, 2025
View SourceMarla-Oodnadatta Soil Conservation Board District Plan - Department for Environment and Water, accessed August 2, 2025
View SourceNSW Bionet Vegetation Classification Data Collection - Research Data Australia
View SourceOctober 2013 - Department for Environment and Water, accessed August 2, 2025
View SourceLitter accumulation and fire risks show direct and indirect climate-dependence at continental scale - PubMed Central, accessed August 2, 2025
View SourceRangeland condition: its meaning and use - a discussion paper - DCCEEW, accessed July 22, 2025
View SourceSubstrate and climate determine terrestrial litter decomposition - PNAS, accessed August 2, 2025
View SourceCan we benchmark annual ground cover maintenance? - CSIRO PUBLISHING | The Rangeland Journal, accessed August 2, 2025
View SourceRestoring Soil Quality to Mitigate Soil Degradation - MDPI, accessed July 20, 2025
View SourceSOIL CONSERVATION IN AUSTRALIA'S SEMI ARID TROPICS: PATHWAYS TO SUCCESS, AND NEW CHALLENGES - DM Freebairn A and DM Silburn - NSERL, accessed July 20, 2025
View SourceThe role of decomposer communities in managing surface fuels: a neglected ecosystem service - CSIRO Publishing, accessed July 12, 2025,
View Source