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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Mount Annan, NSW : Mount Annan Botanic Garden, The Administration Officer
    UID:
    (DE-603)335600093
    Edition: Online-Ausg. Frankfurt am Main Univ.-Bibliothek 2013 Online-Ressource [Online-Ausg.]
    ISSN: 2200-405X
    Content: Changes in vegetation structure and composition over a 28 year period (1978–2006) following removal of human-induced disturbances, were examined in a calcareous coastal dune system in Point Nepean National Park (380 19’S, 1440 41’E) in south-eastern Victoria, Australia. In the early 1980s human habitation of Point Nepean was abandoned and disturbance regimes such as burning, slashing and land clearing were altered or removed, providing an opportunity to study the recovery of disturbed coastal vegetation. Broad-scale and community-level vegetation changes were assessed by comparing quadrat and GIS mapping data from 1978 with data collected in 2006. Results indicate a change in broad vegetation patterns; shrubland vegetation has replaced hind dune grasslands and disturbed areas and there has been a decrease in exposed coastal areas (such as blowouts, dunes and cliffs), and an increase in woody native species and highly invasive woody weeds. The changes highlight the importance of incorporating vegetation states in planning management actions in dynamic coastal vegetation.
    Note: Online-Ausg.:
    In: Cunninghamia, Mount Annan, NSW : Mount Annan Botanic Garden, The Administration Officer, 1981-, Band 11, Heft 4 (2010), Seite 445-456, 2200-405X
    In: volume:11
    In: year:2010
    In: number:4
    In: pages:445-456
    In: extent:12
    Language: English
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  • 2
    UID:
    (DE-603)36716843X
    Format: Online-Ressource
    ISSN: 2200-405X
    Content: Acacia pendula, Weeping Myall, (family Fabaceae) is the most legislatively protected plant species in the New South Wales Hunter Valley. Under the NSW Threatened Species Conservation Act 1995 it is listed as an Endangered Population (in the Hunter Valley) and as a component of two Endangered Ecological Communities (one in the Hunter, one elsewhere in NSW); it is also listed as a Critically Endangered Ecological Community (in the Hunter Valley) on the Commonwealth Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 and listed as threatened in three other eastern Australian States. ...
    In: Cunninghamia, Mount Annan, NSW : Mount Annan Botanic Garden, The Administration Officer, 1981-, Band 14 (2014), Seite 179-200, 2200-405X
    In: volume:14
    In: year:2014
    In: pages:179-200
    Language: English
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  • 3
    UID:
    (DE-603)337689059
    Edition: Online-Ausg. Frankfurt am Main Univ.-Bibliothek 2013 Online-Ressource [Online-Ausg.]
    ISSN: 2200-405X
    Content: Guidelines and core attributes for site-based vegetation surveying and mapping developed for the Northern Territory, are relevant to botanical research, forestry typing, rangeland monitoring and reporting on the extent and condition of native and non-native vegetated landscapes. These initiatives are consistent with national vegetation guidelines and the National Vegetation Information System (NVIS) framework. This paper provides a synopsis of vegetation site data collection, classification and mapping in the Northern Territory, and discusses the benefits of consistency between the guidelines, core attributes and the NVIS framework; both of which has an emphasis on the NVIS hierarchical classification system for describing structural and floristic attributes of vegetation. The long-term aim of the NVIS framework is that national attributes are adopted at regional levels to enable comparability of vegetation information within survey and jurisdictional boundaries in the Northern Territory and across Australia. The guidelines and core attributes are incorporated in current and future vegetation survey and mapping programs in the Northern Territory.
    Note: Online-Ausg.:
    In: Cunninghamia, Mount Annan, NSW : Mount Annan Botanic Garden, The Administration Officer, 1981-, Band 10, Heft 4 (2008), Seite 557-567, 2200-405X
    In: volume:10
    In: year:2008
    In: number:4
    In: pages:557-567
    In: extent:11
    Language: English
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  • 4
    UID:
    (DE-603)36334957X
    Format: Online-Ressource
    ISSN: 2200-405X
    Content: In January 1843, curiosity for natural history led a young German naturalist, Ludwig Leichhardt, to spend about three weeks exploring Mt Royal on the north of the Hunter Valley, about 70 km north west of Newcastle, New South Wales. This was a sidetrack on his journey from Newcastle, through the Hunter Valley and inland to Moreton Bay (Brisbane) and preceded the journeys for which he was to become famous; his 1844–45 overland journey from Moreton Bay to Port Essington (in Northern Territory) and his disappearance without trace in 1848 attempting to cross Australia. ...
    In: Cunninghamia, Mount Annan, NSW : Mount Annan Botanic Garden, The Administration Officer, 1981-, Band 13 (2013), Seite 305-330, 2200-405X
    In: volume:13
    In: year:2013
    In: pages:305-330
    Language: English
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  • 5
    UID:
    (DE-603)352172460
    Format: Online-Ressource
    ISSN: 2200-405X
    Content: African Olive, Olea europaea subsp. cuspidata (Wall. ex G.Don) Cif. (family Oleaceae) is a dense-crowned tree introduced into Australia for horticulture in the mid 19th century. In recent decades, African Olive has become an aggressive woody weed, capable of forming a dense and permanent canopy in a wide range of vegetation types in south-west Sydney and beyond. Characteristics of African Olive invasion in south-west Sydney, and its seed dispersal by frugivorous birds are consistent with experience from Norfolk Island and Hawaii. We use records and aerial photographs from Mount Annan Botanic Garden and other bushland areas in south-west Sydney to describe the invasion stages and impacts of African Olive. The capacity for African Olive to establish in both temperate and subtropical zones, underlie the potential for spread well beyond current distribution in New South Wales. ...
    In: Cunninghamia, Mount Annan, NSW : Mount Annan Botanic Garden, The Administration Officer, 1981-, Band 9, Heft 4 (2006), Seite 545-557, 2200-405X
    In: volume:9
    In: year:2006
    In: number:4
    In: pages:545-557
    In: extent:13
    Language: English
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  • 6
    UID:
    (DE-603)455378126
    ISSN: 2200-405X
    Content: The Greater Blue Mountains World Heritage Area (GBMWHA), a natural area of about one million hectares immediately west of Sydney, Australia, is significant for its biodiversity, and particularly for its richness of eucalypt species (species of Eucalyptus, Angophora and Corymbia in the family Myrtaceae), numbered at 96 species in 2010. This paper describes the finding of a previously unlisted Angophora species in the GBMWHA, and makes a conservation assessment of the population. A population of the Broad-leaved Apple Angophora subvelutina F. Muell. occurs at Euroka Clearing south of Glenbrook just within the eastern edge of Blue Mountains National Park, one of the eight conservation reserves that make up the GBMWHA. The population numbers over 200 plants and there is evidence that the species has been present at the site since before European settlement. The population includes a mixture of age classes and is considered viable, although substantial intergradation is occurring with the closely related species Angophora floribunda. Elsewhere in the Sydney area, the species is relatively uncommon and has been extensively cleared from its relatively fertile habitats. The population in the GBMWHA noted here has conservation significance for its size and long history at the site, and for the unusual ecological conditions of the Euroka diatreme, which is an atypical habitat for the species.
    In: Cunninghamia, Mount Annan, NSW : Mount Annan Botanic Garden, The Administration Officer, 1981-, Band 18 (2018), Seite 73-78, 2200-405X
    In: volume:18
    In: year:2018
    In: pages:73-78
    In: extent:6
    Language: English
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  • 7
    UID:
    (DE-603)455376204
    ISSN: 2200-405X
    Content: The results of a field survey of Prostanthera tallowa (family Lamiaceae), a rare and only recently described shrub from the lower Shoalhaven River valley, on the NSW South Coast, are described. The extent and size of populations in the vicinity of the type locality at Tallowa Dam are greatly expanded and several new and distant populations are described. Information is provided on all known populations and their habitat. The species is regarded as adequately reserved, as almost all known populations occur in protected areas though the actual area of occupancy is small. The species recruits after fire with most sites having been burnt about 10 years ago; the total known population size is currently over 3,300 plants.
    In: Cunninghamia, Mount Annan, NSW : Mount Annan Botanic Garden, The Administration Officer, 1981-, Band 15 (2015), Seite 135-142, 2200-405X
    In: volume:15
    In: year:2015
    In: pages:135-142
    In: extent:8
    Language: English
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  • 8
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Frankfurt am Main : Universitätsbibliothek Johann Christian Senckenberg
    UID:
    (DE-603)477905188
    ISSN: 2200-405X
    Content: Sampling of day-active invertebrates visiting the flowers of Grey Mangrove Avicennia marina subsp. australasica (Walp.) J.Everett (family Acanthaceae) was undertaken at a study site on the Harrington estuary, northern New South Wales, Australia. The study extended over a 4 season period (from 2016 to 2020), with more than 170 anthophilous species being recorded. Nearly all were observed contacting flower stigmas and/or anthers during foraging episodes. At least 113 of the approximately 168 species examined for pollen loads, carried Avicennia pollen. None carried mixed pollen loads, indicating foraging constancy/fidelity. Although pollen carriage does not automatically assign the status of pollinator, nevertheless, the findings indicate Avicennia marina is pollinated by a taxonomically diverse suite of native invertebrates which sit within an assemblage of flower visitors that may include non-pollinating species. Although the invasive honeybee Apis mellifera was seasonally common during most days of observation, it was uncommon or absent on some days. The occurrence of native flower-visiting species was often found to be episodic, with many species being abundant during one day or season of observation, but then absent or rarely encountered at other times. Such behavioral events highlight the need for extended periods of field investigation to illuminate more fully the pollination ecology of individual plant species. Comparison with additional anthophilous insect records from a previous 1990 – 1994 study in an adjacent littoral rainforest community, indicated that this community may furnish a pool of native insects from which Avicennia marina can seasonally recruit a dynamic pollinator network.
    In: Cunninghamia, Mount Annan, NSW : Mount Annan Botanic Garden, The Administration Officer, 1981-, Band 20 (2020), Seite 209-244, 2200-405X
    In: volume:20
    In: year:2020
    In: pages:209-244
    In: extent:36
    Language: English
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  • 9
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Mount Annan, NSW : Mount Annan Botanic Garden, The Administration Officer
    UID:
    (DE-603)336089015
    Edition: Online-Ausg. Frankfurt am Main Univ.-Bibliothek 2013 Online-Ressource [Online-Ausg.]
    ISSN: 2200-405X
    Content: The grass Elymus multiflorus subsp. kingianus (family Poaceae) is considered to be endemic to Lord Howe and Norfolk Islands. We assessed the conservation status of the taxon on Lord Howe Island, New South Wales, and undertook targeted field surveys across three years and several seasons in suitable habitat, based on the single previously recorded location. We found the species occurrence on Lord Howe Island was highly restricted, with only a few plants found at 2 locations in close proximity. A number of exotic grasses pose a threat to the long-term conservation of the taxon, which was assessed as being eligible for listing as critically endangered under the NSW Threatened Species Conservation Act 1995.
    Note: Online-Ausg.:
    In: Cunninghamia, Mount Annan, NSW : Mount Annan Botanic Garden, The Administration Officer, 1981-, Band 12, Heft 2 (2011), Seite 137-142, 2200-405X
    In: volume:12
    In: year:2011
    In: number:2
    In: pages:137-142
    In: extent:6
    Language: English
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  • 10
    UID:
    (DE-603)337664765
    Edition: Online-Ausg. Frankfurt am Main Univ.-Bibliothek 2013 Online-Ressource [Online-Ausg.]
    ISSN: 2200-405X
    Content: Twenty-eight natural populations of Wallaby Grasses, Austrodanthonia species, in central western New South Wales were sampled and species presence related to a suite of environmental characteristics. An average of 12 plants were selectively sampled from each population; most populations consisted of at least four out of five species, Austrodanthonia bipartita, A. caespitosa, A. eriantha, A. fulva and A. setacea. Numerous ecological factors allowed the widespread co-occurrence of these closely-related species. Large-scale rainfall and climatic factors were correlated with species-presence but no universal small-scale site environmental variables were important for all species. The most widespread species was Austrodanthonia caespitosa and environmental variations at a local site scale, depending on exposure to solar radiation, may at least partially overcome regional rainfall and climate influences.
    Note: Online-Ausg.:
    In: Cunninghamia, Mount Annan, NSW : Mount Annan Botanic Garden, The Administration Officer, 1981-, Band 11, Heft 1 (2009), Seite 65-80, 2200-405X
    In: volume:11
    In: year:2009
    In: number:1
    In: pages:65-80
    In: extent:16
    Language: English
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