Tasmania is an
Australian
island and
state of the same name. It is located 200 kilometres (125
mi) south of the eastern side of the
continent, being separated from it by
Bass Strait. The state of Tasmania includes the island of Tasmania, and other
surrounding islands. Tasmania has a population of 484,700 (March 2005,
ABS) and an area of 68,332 square kilometres (26,383
sq mi).
Tasmania promotes itself as the
Natural State and the "Island of Inspiration" owing to its large, and relatively unspoiled natural environment. Formally, almost 37% of Tasmania is in reserves, National Parks and
World Heritage Sites. The island is 364 kilometers long from the northernmost point to the
southernmost point, and 306 kilometers from west to east.
The
state capital and largest city is
Hobart, which encompasses the local government areas of
City of Hobart,
City of Glenorchy and
City of Clarence. Other major population centres include
Launceston in the north, and
Devonport and
Burnie in the northwest.
The subantarctic
Macquarie Island is also under the administration of the state, as part of the
Huon Valley Council local government area.
History
Physical prehistory
It is believed that the island was joined to the mainland until the end of the most recent
ice age approximately 10,000 years ago.
Much of the island is composed of Jurassic dolerite, a basaltic intrusion of magma that upwelled through other rock types and formed large columnar crystals as it cooled. Tasmania has the world's largest areas of dolerite, with many distinctive
mountains and
cliffs formed from this rock type. The Central Plateau and the southeast portions of the island are mostly dolerite.
Mt. Wellington above Hobart is a good example, with the Organ Pipes showing the distinct columns. In the southwest,
Precambrian quartzites are formed from very ancient sea sediments and form strikingly sharp ridges and ranges, such as Federation Peak or
Frenchman's Cap. In the northeast,
granites can be seen at Freycinet. In the northwest and west, mineral rich
volcanic rock can be seen at Mt. Read near
Rosebery, or at
Mt. Lyell near
Queenstown. Also present in the south and northwest are
limestones in which some magnificent
caves can be found.
The quartzite and dolerite in the higher mountains show evidence of
glaciation and much of Australia's glaciated landscape is found on the Central Plateau and the Southwest. The combination of these different rock types offers incredible scenery, much of it distinct from any other regions of the world.
Indigenous people
Tasmania was first inhabited by the Tasmanian Aborigines, and evidence indicates their presence in the region, later to become an island, at least 35,000 years ago (rising sea levels cut Tasmania off from mainland Australia about 10,000 years ago). The Aboriginal people in Tasmania were divided into nine main ethnic groups (see map). The indigenous population at the time of
British settlement in
1803 has been estimated at between 5,000 and 10,000 people, but through persecution (see
Black War and
Black Line) and
disease the population had dwindled to 300 in
1833. The entire indigenous population was moved to
Flinders Island by
George Augustus Robinson at this time.
Truganini (1812-1876) is generally recognised as the last full-blooded Tasmanian Aborigine, although there's strong evidence that it was in fact
Fanny Cochrane Smith, who was born at Wybalena, and died in
1905.
European arrival
The first reported sighting of Tasmania by a
European was on
November 24 1642 by the
Dutch explorer
Abel Tasman who named the island Anthoonij van Diemenslandt, after his sponsor, the Governor of the
Dutch East Indies. The name was later shortened to
Van Diemens Land by the British. Captain
James Cook also sighted the island in
1777, and numerous other European seafarers made landfalls, adding a colourful array to the names of topographical features.
The first settlement was by the
British at
Risdon Cove on the eastern bank of the
Derwent estuary in
1803, by a small party sent from
Sydney, under Lt. John Bowen for the purpose of preventing the French from claiming the island. An alternative settlement was established by Captain David Collins 5 km to the south in 1804 in
Sullivan's Cove on the western side of the Derwent, where fresh water was more plentiful. The latter settlement became known as Hobart Town or Hobarton, later shortened to Hobart, after the British Colonial Secretary of the time, Lord Hobart. The settlement at Risdon was later abandoned.
The early settlers were mostly convicts and their military guards, with the task of developing
agriculture and other industries. Numerous other
convict-based settlements were made in Van Diemens Land, including secondary prisons, such as the particularly harsh penal colonies at
Port Arthur in the southeast and
Macquarie Harbour on the West Coast.
Van Diemen's Land was proclaimed a separate colony from
New South Wales, with its own judicial establishment and
Legislative Council, on
December 3 1825.
World attention
Although the state is seldom in the world news, global attention has turned to Tasmania a few times.
Tasmania was badly affected by the
1967 Tasmanian fires in which there was major loss of life and property.
In the
1970s the state government announced plans to flood environmentally significant
Lake Pedder. The collapse of the
Tasman Bridge when struck by the bulk ore carrier
MV Lake Illawarra in 1975 made crossing the
River Derwent at
Hobart almost impossible. National and international attention surrounded the
No Dams campaign for the
Franklin River in the early
1980s. This contributed to the start of the
Green movement.
Tasmania has received a position in the top ten of several popular international tourism publications.
On
April 28,
1996 in the incident now known as the
Port Arthur Massacre, lone gunman
Martin Bryant shot dead 35 people (including tourists and residents) and injured 37 others. The use of
firearms was immediately reviewed, and new gun ownership laws were adopted nationwide, with Tasmania's law one of the strictest in the nation.
The
Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race is an annual blue-water sailing event that attracts foreign media attention.
On
May 14 2004 the royal wedding of former Hobart woman
Mary Donaldson to
Frederik, Crown Prince of Denmark, and their subsequent visit in
2005, again drew some international attention to the state.
In April
2006 the
Beaconsfield Gold Mine created world media attention when a minor earthquake triggered a
mine collapse that killed one person and trapped two others underground for fourteen days.
Geography
Tasmania is a rugged island of
temperate climate, and was considered so similar in some ways to pre-industrial
England that it was referred to by some English colonists as 'a Southern England'.
Tasmania has been volcanically inactive in recent geological times, and has rugged mountain ranges more similar to New Zealand than mainland Australia.
The most mountainous regions are the
Central Highlands and south western areas, which cover most of the central, west and south west parts of the state. The central east area (the
Midlands) is fairly flat by comparison, and is predominantly used for agriculture, although various types of farming activity can be seen all around the state.
The West Coast has a high rainfall which powers most of the hydro-electric projects, and its earnings from mineral activities are significant. The
West Coast Range has some of the better known West Coast mines on its slopes – notably the
Mount Lyell mine.
The Southwest region, in particular, is densely forested, the
National Park holding some of the last temperate rainforests in the
world. Management of such an isolated and inaccessible area has been made easier and more reliable with the advent of
satellite imaging.
Most of the population lives on and around the coastal rivers – the
Derwent and the
Tamar and
Mersey Rivers in the north.
The temperate climate (Tasmania is the only Australian state with any land south of the 40th
parallel), rustic environment and numerous historic features make Tasmania a popular choice for retirees who prefer a temperate climate over a
tropical one such as
Queensland. Tasmania receives some
snow in the highlands during winter months, but very little in significantly populated areas.
Tasmania is separated from the Australian mainland by
Bass Strait, one of the roughest bodies of water in the world, primarily a result of its shallow depth (typically around 60 m) and its susceptibility to
Indian and
Pacific Ocean currents and swells. (Unlike official worldwide usage, most Australians use the term
Southern Ocean for the water west and southwest of Tasmania.)
Climate, soils and vegetation
Tasmania is located at latitude 42° South, longitude 147° East, right in the pathway of the notorious "
Roaring Forties" wind that encircles the globe. The Tasmanian climate is extremely variable with high fluctuations in temperature and wind speed during the average week.
Summer lasts from December to February when the average maximum temperature at sea level is 21 °C (70 °F). Winter is from June to August with an average maximum temperature at sea level of 12 °C (54 °F). Inland, temperatures are much cooler. Liawenee on the Central Plateau is regarded as the coldest place in Australia with temperatures even in February ranging only from a still-cold minimum of 4 °C (39 °F) to a delightful maximum of 17 °C (63 °F). In winter the Central Plateau ranges from around -2 °C (28 °F) to 3 °C (37 °F), with much, though very soft, snow.
Highest maximum temperature: 40.8 °C (105.4 °F),
Hobart,
4 January 1976
Lowest minimum temperature: -13.0 °C (8.6 °F),
Butlers Gorge and
Shannon,
30 June 1983
Rainfall in Tasmania follows a complicated pattern rather analogous to that found on large continents at the same latitude in the northern hemisphere. On the western side rainfall incrases from around 1,600mm (64 inches) at Strahan on the coast up to 2,700mm (110 inches) at cradle Valley in the highlands. There is a strong winter maximum in rainfall: January and February typically averages between 30 and 40 percent the rainfall of July and August, though even in the driest months rain usually falls on every second day and the number of rainy days per year is much greater than on any part of the Australian mainland. Further east in the Lake Country, annual rainfall declines to around 900mm (35 inches), whilst in the Midlands, annual rainfall is as low as 450mm (18 inches) at Ross and generally below 600mm (24 inches). Here the rainfall is more evenly distributed than in the west, and most months receive very similar averages.
The densely populated northern coast is a much drier version of the western side, with annual rainfall ranging from 710mm (28 inches) at Launceston to 1,050mm (42 inches) at Burnie in the west and Scottsdale in the east. Most rain falls in winter and in summer the average can be as low as 35mm (1.5 inches) per month in the Lower Tamar. The east coast is wetter than the Midlands, with an average annual rainfall ranging from 1,000mm (40 inches) at St. Helens to around 640mm at Swansea. Herre the rainfall is evenly distributed over the year but can be very erratic as heavy rainfalls from the warm Tasman Sea are quite frequent. Whereas a three-day fall of 125mm (5 inches) occurs only once every fifty years the north coast, it occurs on average once every four or five years around Swansea and Bicheno, and on 7-8 June 1954 there were many falls as large as 230mm (9 inches) in two days in that area. The east coast is sometime called the "sun coast" because of its sunny climate due to the rain shadow of the prevailing westerly winds.
Tasmania's reputation in Australia for having high rainfall, however, differs from the true situation: several sections of inland Tasmania, together with
Flinders Island, were declared drought-affected areas by the state government on 1 May 2007.
Soils
Despite the presence of some Quaternary
glaciation, Tasmania's soils are no more fertile than those of mainland Australia, largely because most are severely
leached and the areas with driest climate (thus least leaching) were unaffected by glaciation or alluvia derived therefrom. Most soils on the Bass Strait Islands, the east coast and western Tasmania are very infertile
Spodosols or
Psamments, with some even less fertile "lateritic podzolic soils" in the latter region. Most of these lands are thus not used for agricutlure, but there's much productive forestry - which remains the economic mainstay of the state.
On the north coast, apart from some relatively fertile alluvial soils used for fruit growing, there are also deep red, easily workable soils known as "krasnozems" ("red land"). These soils are highly acidic and fix phosphate very effectively, but their extremely favourable physical properties make them extensively used for dairying, beef cattle and fodder crops.
The Midlands and the Lower Derwent present a different story from the rest of the state. Owing to a relatively dry climate and alkaline (mostly
dolerite) parent material, these soils are relatively unleached and contain lime in the deeper subsoil. They are mostly classified as "prarie soils" or "brown earths" and bear some resemblance to the
chernozems of Russia and North America, although they're much lower in available
phosphorus and somewhat acidic in the surface levels. Their higher nutrient levels, however, allow them to support productive pasture and large numbers of sheep are grazed in these regions. Some grain crops are also grown in the driest areas. In the alluvial areas of southeastern Tasmania, rich alluvial soils permit
apples to be grown.
Vegetation
All these factors contribute to the extremely diverse Tasmanian vegetation, from the heavily grazed grassland of the dry Midlands to the tall evergreen
eucalypt forest,
alpine heathlands and large areas of cool
temperate rainforests and moorlands in the rest of the State. Many flora species are unique to Tasmania, and some are related to species in
South America and
New Zealand through ancestors which grew on the super continent of
Gondwana, 50 million years ago.
Government
The form of the government of Tasmania is prescribed in its
Constitution, which dates from
1856, although it has been amended many times since then. Since
1901 Tasmania has been a state of the
Commonwealth of Australia, and the
Australian Constitution regulates its relationship with the Commonwealth, and prescribes which powers each level of government enjoys.
Politics
Tasmanian politics is often characterised as being overly concerned with personality and
parochialism. These factors may be due to the relative smallness of the Tasmanian electorate, as well as historical claims of
Launceston being the "northern capital". From 1803 until the proclamation of Van Diemen's Land in 1823, the island had been split into two dependencies of New South Wales, with Hobart and Launceston the administrative centres.
In the Commonwealth Parliament, Tasmania is well represented in the
Senate, where seats are not proportional to population. Between
1975 and
2005, Tasmanian independent senator
Brian Harradine often held the
balance of power. As a result he was able to gain the passage of legislation that, although often matching his conservative religious views, was also very financially rewarding for the state. Harradine successfully defended his seat in six consecutive senate elections and didn't stand for re-election at the
2004 federal election. His term ended in June 2005.
Tasmania's
House of Assembly and local government elections use a system of multi-seat
proportional representation known as
Hare-Clark.
In the
2002 state election, the
Labor Party held 14 of the 25 available seats. The
Liberal Party saw their percentage of the vote decrease dramatically, claiming only 7 seats. The
Greens won four seats, with over 18% of the vote, the highest proportion of any Green party in any parliament in the world.
On
23 February 2004, the Premier
Jim Bacon announced his retirement, due to being diagnosed with
lung cancer from smoking. In his last months he opened a vigorous anti-smoking campaign which included many restrictions of where individuals could smoke, such as pubs. He died four months later.
Bacon was succeeded by
Paul Lennon, who, after leading the state for two years, went on to win the
2006 state election in his own right.
Economy
Tasmania's erratic economy was first experienced by colonists in the early 1800s. The reasons have been many and varied over the years. More recently the reasons have been attributed to: lack of federal infrastructure
highway, lack of a
gold rush, lack of open
immigration initiatives, lack of population, decline in the
wool and mineral economies, lack of early colonial initiatives, or lack of foreign investment. For the length of the history of Tasmania there has been a continuing exodus of youth to mainland Australia in order to seek employment opportunities.
Traditionally Tasmania's main industries have been:
mining, including
copper,
zinc,
tin, and
iron;
agriculture;
forestry; and
tourism. Significantly in the
1940s and
1950s there had been a notion of 'Hydro-Industrialisation' embodied in the state by
Hydro Tasmania. These all have had varying fortunes over the last century and more, involved in ebbs and flows of population moving in and away dependent upon the specific requirements of the dominant industries of the time.
There had been a decline in
manufacturing during the
1990s, leading to a drain of some of the island's trained and experienced working population to mainland Australia. The major urban centres such as
Melbourne and
Sydney are popular destinations.
The state has a large number of food exporting sectors, including but not limited to
seafood (for example,
Atlantic salmon,
abalone and
crayfish).
Since
2001, Tasmania has experienced a positive turnaround. Favourable economic conditions throughout Australia, cheaper air fares and three new
Spirit of Tasmania ferries have all contributed to what is now a booming tourism industry.
Today, a significant number of employed Tasmanians work for the government. Other major employers include the
Federal Group, owner of several
hotels and Tasmania's two
casinos, and
Gunns Limited, the state's biggest
forestry company. In the late 1990s, many national companies based their
call centres in the state after obtaining cheap access to broad-band fibre-optic connections.
Apparently the state's housing market was undervalued in the early part of
2000, and a large boom in the national housing market finally made Tasmanian housing prices rise dramatically. This has in part been attributed to increased levels of interstate and
overseas migration. A shortage of rental accommodation has caused problems for many of Tasmania's low income earners.
Small business is a large part of the community life and it's believed by many that the business environment in Tasmania isn't an easy one to survive in. However there have been many success stories, such as
International Catamarans,
Moorilla Estate and
Tassal.
Transport
The fastest and cheapest method of travel across Bass Strait is by
air. The main carriers are
Qantas and its subsidiary
JetStar, and
Virgin Blue, which fly direct routes to
Melbourne,
Sydney,
Brisbane, and
Adelaide. Major airports include
Hobart International Airport and
Launceston Airport; the smaller airports,
Burnie (Wynyard) and
Devonport, are serviced by
Regional Express, which generally fly only to Melbourne and the Bass Strait islands.
The domestic
sea route is serviced by
Bass Strait passenger/vehicle ferries operated by the Tasmanian Government-owned
TT-Line (Tasmania). From
1986 the
Abel Tasman made six weekly overnight crossings between
Devonport and
Melbourne. It was replaced by the
Spirit of Tasmania in
1993, which performed the same route and schedule. The most recent change was the
2002 replacement of the Spirit by two Superfast ferries -
Spirit of Tasmania I and
Spirit of Tasmania II — which brought the number of weekly overnight crossings up to fourteen, plus additional daylight crossings in peak times. In January
2004 a third ship, the slightly smaller
Spirit of Tasmania III, started the Devonport to
Sydney route. This service was axed by the Tasmanian Government in June 2006 quoting low passenger numbers. Two container ships owned by
Toll Shipping also make daily crossings between
Burnie and
Melbourne. The port of Hobart also serves as a host to visiting cruise ships and before the
September 11, 2001 attacks was a regular port of call for
United States Navy ships returning home from the
Indian Ocean and
Persian Gulf.
The state is also home to
International Catamarans, a manufacturer of very high-speed aluminium vessels (commonly known as
SeaCat) that regularly broke records when they were first launched. The state Government tried using them on the Bass Strait run, but eventually the decision was made to discontinue the run due to concerns over viability and the suitability of the vessels for the extreme weather conditions sometimes experienced in Bass Strait.
Tasmania,
Hobart in particular, serves as Australia's chief sea link to
Antarctica, with the
Australian Antarctic Division located in
Kingston. Hobart is also the home port of the French ship
l'Astrolabe which makes regular supply runs to the
French Southern Territories near and in Antarctica.
Hobart also has the second deepest natural port in the world, second to only
Rio de Janeiro in
Brazil.
Within the state, the primary form of transport is by road. Since the 1980s, many of the state's
highways have undergone regular upgrades. These include the Hobart Southern Outlet, Launceston Southern Outlet,
Bass Highway reconstruction, and the
Huon Highway.
Rail transport in Tasmania consists of
narrow gauge lines to all four major population centres and to
mining and
forestry operations on the west coast and in the northwest. Services are operated by
TasRail, a
Pacific National subsidiary. Regular passenger
train services in the state ceased in
1977; the only trains are for freight, and there are tourist trains in specific areas, for example the
West Coast Wilderness Railway. In 2005 there were concerns that the rail service was in so much trouble that it might stop for everything but cement haulage.
Culture
Cuisine
During colonial times typical English
cuisine would have been standard in most areas of Tasmania. The arrival of immigrants and changing cultural patterns has meant Tasmania now has a wide range of restaurants. Scattered across Tasmania are a number of
vineyards and Tasmanian beer brands such as
Boags and
Cascade are known and sold on the mainland.
King Island off the north-western coast of Tasmania has a reputation for boutique cheeses and dairy products.
Events
List of Events in Tasmania
In order to foster tourism, the state government encourages or supports several different annual events in and around the island. The best known of these would be the Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race, starting on Boxing Day in Sydney and usually arriving at Constitution Dock in Hobart around three to four days later, during the Taste of Tasmania an annual food and wine festival.
Other events include the road rally Targa Tasmania which attracts world-class rally drivers and is staged all over the state, over five days. Rural or regional events include Agfest is a three-day agricultural show held at Carrick (just west of Launceston) in early May, and the Royal Hobart Show and Royal Launceston Show, both held in October of each year. Music events held in Tasmania include the Falls Festival at Marion Bay (a Victoria event now held in both Victoria and Tasmania on New Year's Eve), and the Southern Roots Festival held in Hobart each Easter. A recent addition to the state has been the 10 Days on the Island arts festival; however, it has drawn criticism from environmental groups for its acceptance of sponsorship from forestry company Gunns.
Literature
Tasmania has a relatively small but growing literary culture. Notable titles include For the Term of His Natural Life by Marcus Clarke, The Sound of One Hand Clapping by Richard Flanagan and Out of Ireland by Christopher Koch. The ‘Tasmanian genre’ of fiction includes children’s books such as Tiger Tale by Marion and Steve Isham.
Music
There is, in Tasmania, a varied musical scene, ranging from the Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra whose home is the Federation Concert Hall, to a substantial number of small bands, orchestras, string quintets, saxophone ensembles and individual artists who perform at a variety of venues around the state. Tasmania is also home to a vibrant community of composers including Constantine Koukias, Maria Grenfell and Don Kay, who is the patron of the Tasmanian Composers Collective which is the representative body for composers in Tasmania. Tasmania even has it's own gospel choir, with the Southern Gospel Choir. The Southern Gospel Choir performs regularly and is comprised of students that study at the Conservatorium of Music, which is at the Hobart campus of the University of Tasmania, and people with good voices who simply wish to join. Death Metal band Psycroptic hail from Tasmania and are one of the most prominent Australian metal bands. Apart from the Classical musical season and regular gigs across the state by a number of local and interstate groups two of the highlights of the musical year would be the Falls Festival held during the summer holidays and the Carols by Candlelight held in the weeks prior to Christmas.
Sport
The dominant sports in Tasmania are cricket and Australian rules football. The Tasmanian Tigers cricket team, which plays home games at Bellerive Oval on the eastern shore of the Derwent River, Hobart, represents the state in limited overs and first-class cricket competitions. Tasmania has produced two international cricket stars, David Boon and current Australian captain Ricky Ponting. However, in the last few years Tasmanian cricketing quality has increased with them winning the ING One Day Cup in 2004-05 for the first time in 10 years, and the Pura Cup for the first time in 2006-07.
Despite Australian rules football's huge popularity in the state, Tasmania doesn't have a team in the AFL. They do have a team (the Tasmanian Devils) in the VFL (Victorian league), and a team in the national league is a popular topic among supporters as well as the state government (one of the potential sponsors of such a team). Some AFL teams play scheduled games at Aurora Stadium (at York Park in Launceston). These teams include the Hawthorn Football Club, who substitute their home games in Melbourne for games at Aurora Stadium to create extra revenue. They generally play 3-4 games a year in the state and the club entered in to a sponsorship agreement with the Tasmanian government, to start in the 2007 season.
Previously, St. Kilda played a few matches here last year, including the infamous match against Fremantle which was controversially drawn after the umpires failed to hear the siren. The AFL continues to consider expanding into Tasmania.
In basketball, the state hasn't been represented in the National Basketball League since the demise of the Hobart Devils in 1996; however, strong representation from the state can be found in the South East Australian Basketball League. Two men's teams: The Oasis Hobart Chargers, and the Northwest Tasmania Thunder are joined in the women's SEABL by the Launceston Tornadoes and the Women's NW Tasmania Thunder also.
Tasmania's small population and low sponsorship potential results in the state not being represented in national football (soccer) (see Football (soccer) in Tasmania) and netball leagues.
In Tasmania, there's a motor racing circuit in Launceston called Symmons Plains Raceway. It holds rounds of the V8 Supercars, the YMF Loans Australian Superbike Championship, Australian Formula 3 Championship and the CAMS Nationals.
Prominent Tasmanians
List of Tasmanians
Tasmania has produced a number of significant people. These include: the actor Errol Flynn, Baywatch actor Jaason Simmons, Dancer and Choreographer Graeme Murphy, Composer Peter Sculthorpe, Crown Princess Mary of Denmark (Mary Donaldson), World Champion Woodchopper David Foster, Australian cricket personalities Ricky Ponting and David Boon Motor Racing Australian Touring car/V8 Supercar John Bowe (1995 champion) Marcos Ambrose (2003-4 champion) Marcos now races in the NASCAR Busch Series.
Indigenous animals
Thylacine
The island of Tasmania was home to the Thylacine, a marsupial which resembled a wild dog. Known colloquially as the Tasmanian Tiger for the distinctive striping across its back, it became extinct in mainland Australia much earlier because of competition by the dingo, introduced in prehistoric times. Owing to persecution by farmers, government-funded bounty hunters and, in the final years, collectors for overseas museums, it also appears to have been exterminated in Tasmania. The last known animal died in captivity in 1936. Many alleged sightings have been recorded, none of them confirmed.
Tasmanian Devil
The Tasmanian Devil is a carnivorous marsupial found exclusively on the island of Tasmania. The size of a small dog but stocky and muscular, the Tasmanian Devil is characterised by its black fur with white patches. It has a loud and disturbing screech-like growl, possesses a vicious temperament and is predominantly a scavenger. The Devil survived European settlement and was considered widespread and common throughout Tasmania until recently.
Like a lot of the wildlife, fast vehicles on the roads are a problem for Tasmanian Devils, which are often killed while feeding on other road-killed animals such as wallabies.
As of 2005 the Tasmanian Devil population has been reduced by up to 80% in parts of Tasmania by the devil facial tumour disease, which is gradually spreading throughout the island. It is believed the majority have starved when the tumours have spread to their mouths and that the tumours are spread by fighting between devils over carcasses they feed on – typically, fighting devils will bite one another's faces.
There is no known cure for the disease, and intensive research is underway to determine its cause. There is also a captive breeding program being undertaken by the Tasmanian government to establish a disease-free, genetically-diverse population of Tasmanian Devils outside Tasmania.
Birds
Many birds of the Australian mainland and surrounding oceans are also found in Tasmania. Tasmania has 12 endemic bird species:
4 honeyeaters (family Meliphagidae) - the Yellow Wattlebird (world's largest honeyeater) and the Yellow-throated, Black-headed and Strong-billed Honeyeaters
3 Australo-Papuan warblers (family Acanthizidae) - the Tasmanian Thornbill, the Scrubtit and the Tasmanian Scrubwren
1 pardalote (family Pardalotidae) - the endangered Forty-spotted Pardalote
1 old-world flycatcher (family Muscicapidae) - the Dusky Robin
1 corvid (family Artamidae) - the Black Currawong
1 parrot (family Psittacidae) - the Green Rosella
1 rail (family Rallidae) - the Tasmanian Native-hen, Australia's only flightless land bird other than the giant ratites (Emu and Southern Cassowary).
The endemic Tasmanian Emu was exterminated in the mid-1800s. The Tasmanian Wedge-tailed Eagle is a threatened endemic subspecies.
Frogs
Tasmania is home to 11 species of frogs. Three of these are only found in Tasmania, the Tasmanian Tree Frog (Litoria burrowsae), the Tasmanian Froglet (Crinia tasmaniensis) and the only recently discovered Moss Froglet (Bryobatrachus nimbus). Of the 11 species that inhabit Tasmania all are native to Australia. Tasmania is home to the largest breeding population of Growling Grass Frogs (Litoria raniformis), a vulnerable species, which has declined over much of its range.
European Red Fox
On September 24, 2007, Tasmania formed a task force to eliminate the European red fox. Officials planned to spend up A$ 50 million ($ 43 million) on an eradication campaign. Foxes (between 50 and 200) could devastate ground-nesting birds and native rodents. Experts estimated 30 million foxes in Australia, having been introduced by European settlers.
Places in Tasmania
» See also Geography of Tasmania.
Image:Hobart_Marina_MTWellington.jpg|View of Hobart foreshore with Mt Wellington in the background
Image:CradleMountainTas.jpg|Dove Lake and Cradle Mountain, Central Tasmanian Highlands
Image:Bay-of-Fires-014.jpg|Bay of Fires, East Coast of Tasmania
Image:Bruny-Island-068.jpg|A small island just off the shore of Bruny Island, South East of Tasmania
Image:Au tas freycinet honeymoonbay 1.jpg|Honeymoon Bay, Freycinet National Park, East Coast of Tasmania
Image:Tesselated_pavement_tasman_peninsula.jpg|Tessellated pavement, a rare rock formation on the Tasman Peninsula.
See also: List of Australian islands, lakes, bridges, highways, rivers, mountains and regions.
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