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THE ECOLOGY OF ATHROTAXIS D DON (TAXODIACEAE) .1. STAND STRUCTURE AND REGENERATION OF ATHROTAXIS-CUPRESSOIDES

Version 2 2025-01-15, 01:04
Version 1 2023-05-25, 21:53
journal contribution
posted on 2025-01-15, 01:04 authored by PJ CULLEN, James Kirkpatrick
Athrotaxis cupressoides forms stands of varying size class and age class structure in the high subalpine and alpine environments of Tasmania. As with some other southern hemisphere gymnosperms with great longevity, A. cupressoides does not successfully regenerate in dense forest stands without disturbance but does so in many open stands. Vegetative regeneration through root suckers occurs in many such stands. Suckers are most frequent in bogs and least evident in blockstreams. There has been little successful seedling or sucker regeneration in open stands in the east of the range of the species since European occupation of the Central Plateau. Exclosure experiments and field observations show that seedlings, suckers and adult foliage are heavily grazed by introduced placental and native marsupial mammals. © 1988, CSIRO. All rights reserved.

History

Publication title

Australian Journal of Botany

Volume

36

Issue

5

Article number

5

Number

5

Pagination

547-560:14

ISSN

0067-1924

Department/School

Geography, Planning, and Spatial Sciences

Publisher

CSIRO PUBLISHING

Publication status

  • Published

Rights statement

The definitive version is available at http://www.publish.csiro.au/nid/65.htm

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