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- White feather honeymyrtle, a paperbark tree with lance-shaped leaves that is covered with creamy-coloured flowers in summer (en)
- Casuarina trees are the most widespread in Sydney after the eucalyptus. (en)
- A river-flat eucalyptus forest in Georges River (en)
- A swamp oak forest near Prospect Creek (en)
- A wet sclerophyll forest in Hornsby (en)
- Heathland in Bundeena (en)
- The spotted dove is a small, long-tailed pigeon that was introduced in Australia in the 1860s. (en)
- Salt marshes in Towra Point (en)
- Warm temperate rainforest in Wahroonga (en)
- Sydney red gum, a common woodland and forest tree of Eastern Australia (en)
- The pied currawong is a common bird in the plain and is usually seen in urban forests and backyards. (en)
- Dry sclerophyll bushland in Botany Bay National Park (en)
- Grassy woodland/savanna in the Cumberland Plain Woodland (en)
- The curtain fig is one of the most common street trees in Sydney and is used as a shade tree. (en)
- Australian ravens are notable for their screechy, high pitched ah-ah-aaaah calls. (en)
- Crested pigeons are usually found in the open grasslands and wooded areas of the plain. (en)
- Noisy miners are ubiquitous in urban, suburban and woodland areas. (en)
- Commonly sighted in Sydney, Australian magpies are known for their distinctive, "gargling" calls. (en)
- Grey butcherbirds, known for their frisky song, are found in woodlands, acacia shrublands and residential townships. (en)
- Narrow-leaved bottlebrush is a shrub which has a rigid point, and red flower spikes in late spring or early summer. (en)
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