Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Fraser Island' has mentioned 'Species' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
[9] The island is home to a small number of mammal species,[10] as well as a diverse range of birds, reptiles and amphibians, including the occasional saltwater crocodile.
[16] The acidity prevents many species from inhabiting the lakes.
Estimates of the number of mammal species present on Fraser Island range from 25 to 50.
[29] There are 19 species of bats which live on or visit the island.
There has been a total of 74 different species of reptiles recorded on Fraser Island.
[29] 18 species of snakes have been identified with one third of them considered dangerous, including the extremely venomous eastern brown snake.
Some frog species have evolved to cope with the acidic waters of lakes and swamps on the island, and are appropriately called acid frogs.
[41] There are over 350 different species of birds on the island.
The island is visited by 20 species of migratory wader birds from as far afield as Siberia.
[29] The island provides habitat for 22 different species of gull and tern, four species of falcon and six species of kingfisher.
Cetaceans, such as humpback whales and some species of dolphins are frequent visitors to the area.
[28] Great white, bull and tiger sharks can be found, with the latter species sometimes approaching fishermen wading in the surf.
[23] 24 freshwater fish species are found in the island's lakes.
There has been 300 species of ants recorded on Fraser Island.
More than 865 species of plants grow on the island.
Along the coast, the foredunes are dominated by salt-tolerant species which includes pigface, goats foot vine and beach spinifex.
[20] Spinifex sericeus is an important foundation species.
Decayed matter from this dune grass breaks down in the sand, providing vital nutrients for other plant species, such as the beach oak.
[16] The rare Angiopteris evecta, a species of fern that has the largest fronds in the world, grows on the island.
Typically these zones range from rushes in the shallows, then a mix of pioneer species on the beaches, through to sedges, heath, paperbarks, shrubs and finally eucalypt or banksia woodlands.
Tailor is one of the more common species sought by anglers on Fraser Island and along the Queensland coast.
The latter far exceeds known depths of podzols anywhere else in the world and has a direct influence on plant succession, with the older dune systems causing retrogressive succession when the soil horizon becomes too deep to provide nutrition for tall forest species.
These processes, acting on a sand medium, include biological adaptation (such as unusual rainforest succession), and biological evolution (such as the development of rare and biogeographically significant species of plants and animals).
These fens support an unusual number of rare and threatened invertebrate and vertebrate species.
The property is sufficiently large, diverse and free from disturbance to contain all ecosystem components required for viable populations of all species and for continued maintenance of all natural phenomena.