Somers Region Side B Web.Qxd

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Somers Region Side B Web.Qxd Indigenous plants suitable for revegetation or landscaping in the Somers Region. Scientific Name Common Name Size h x w (m) 123456 CANOPY Acacia mearnsii Black Wattle 25 x 10 Acacia melanoxylon Blackwood 30 x 15 TREES Allocasuarina littoralis Black Sheoak 8 x 5 Allocasuarina verticillata Drooping Sheoak 11 x 6 Banksia integrifolia subsp. integrifolia Coast Banksia 20 x 10 Banksia marginata Silver Banksia 2(10) x 2(5) Bursaria spinosa subsp. spinosa Sweet Bursaria 6 x 3 Eucalyptus cephalocarpa Silver-leaf Stringybark 20 x 15 Eucalyptus obliqua Messmate Stringybark 70 x 35 Eucalyptus ovata var. ovata Swamp Gum 30 x 20 Eucalyptus radiata subsp. radiata Narrow-leaved Peppermint 30 x 20 Eucalyptus viminalis subsp. pryoriana Coast Manna-gum 10 x 6 Leptospermum lanigerum Woolly Tea-tree 6 x 2 Melaleuca ericifolia Swamp Paperbark 9 x 3 SMALL Acacia longifolia var. sophorae Coast Wattle 4 x 5 Acacia myrtifolia Myrtle Wattle 3 x 2 TREES / Acacia oxycedrus Spike Wattle 3 x 2 LARGE Acacia paradoxa Hedge Wattle 4 x 5 Acacia stricta Hop Wattle 5 x 2 SHRUBS Allocasuarina misera, A. paradoxa Slender, Green Sheoak 2 x 1.5–2 Allocasuarina paludosa Scrub Sheoak 2 x 2 Aotus ericoides Common Aotus 1.5 x 1.5 Bossiaea cinerea Showy Bossiaea 2 x 2 Brachyloma ciliatum Fringed Brachyloma 0.5 x 1 Cassinia aculeata Common Cassinia 4 x 2 Coprosma quadrifida Prickly Currant-bush 4 x 1.5 Correa alba var. alba White Correa 2 x 3 Correa reflexa Common Correa 2 x 2 Daviesia latifolia Hop Bitter-pea 3 x 2 Dillwynia cinerascens, D. glaberimma Grey, Smooth Parrot-pea 1.5 x 1.5, 2 x 2 Epacris impressa Common Heath 1.5 x 0.6 Epacris obtusifolia Blunt-leaf Heath 2 x 1.5 Goodenia ovata Hop Goodenia 2.5 x 3 Hakea nodosa, H. ulicina Yellow, Furze Hakea 3 x 2 Hibbertia fasciculata var. prostrata Bundled Guinea-flower 0.5 x 0.5 Hibbertia riparia Erect Guinea-flower 1 x 0.6 Isopogon ceratophyllus Horny Cone-bush 0.6 x 1.2 Leptospermum continentale Prickly Tea-tree 4 x 2 Leptospermum myrsinoides Heath Tea-tree 2.5 x 1 Leucopogon australis, L. ericoides Spike, Pink Beard-heath 1.5 x 0.7–0.8 Leucopogon parviflorus Coast Beard-heath 4 x 3 Leucopogon virgatus var. virgatus Common Beard-heath 1 x 0.6 Lomatia ilicifolia Holly Lomatia 2 x 1 Melaleuca squarrosa Scented Paperbark 5 x 2 Olearia lirata Snowy Daisy-bush 5 x 3 Olearia ramulosa var. ramulosa Twiggy Daisy-bush 2.5 x 1 Ozothamnus ferrugineus Tree Everlasting 3 x 2 Persoonia juniperina Prickly Geebung 0.5 x 0.3 Platylobium obtusangulum Common Flat-pea 1 x 1 Pultenaea daphnoides Large-leaf Bitter-pea 3 x 2 Pultenaea gunnii subsp. gunnii Golden Bush-pea 1.5 x 0.5 Pultenaea stricta Rigid Bush-pea 1 x 1 Rhagodia candolleana subsp. candolleana Seaberry Saltbush 2 x 2.5 Ricinocarpos pinifolius Wedding Bush 3 x 2 Solanum laciniatum Large Kangaroo Apple 3 x 3 Tetratheca ciliata Pink Bells 0.6 x 0.6 GROUND Acaena novae-zelandiae Bidgee Widgee 0.6 x spreading Acrotriche prostrata Trailing Ground-berry 0.3 x spreading COVERS Acrotriche serrulata Honey Pots 0.3 x 1 Arthropodium strictum Chocolate Lily 1 x 0.8 Astroloma humifusum Cranberry Heath 0.5 x 1.5 Billardiera scandens var. scandens Common Apple-berry 1 x 1 climber Brunonia australis Blue Pincushion 0.5 x 0.2 Bulbine bulbosa Bulbine Lily 0.6 x 0.3 Burchardia umbellata Milkmaids 0.5 x 0.2 Centella cordifolia Centella 0.1 x spreading Chrysocephalum apiculatum Common Everlasting 2 x 0.3 Chrysocephalum semipapposum Clustered Everlasting 1 x 3 Clematis aristata Mountain Clematis Climber Clematis microphylla var. microphylla Small-leaved Clematis Climber Dianella laevis Pale Flax-lily 0.8 x 0.5 Dianella admixta Black-anther Flax-lily 1 x 2.5 Dichondra repens Kidney Weed 0.1 x spreading Euchiton collinus Creeping Cudweed 0.2 x spreading Geranium sp. 2 Variable Crane’s-bill 0.5 x 0.5–0.8 Goodenia geniculata Bent Goodenia 0.1 x 0.5 Gratiola peruviana Austral Brooklime 0.3 x 1.5 Hovea heterophylla Common Hovea 0.6 x 0.3 Helichrysum scorpioides Button Everlasting 0.3 x 0.3 Hydrocotyle laxiflora Stinking Pennywort 0.2 x spreading Hypericum gramineum Small St John’s Wort 0.3 x 0.2 Kennedia prostrata Running Postman 0.1 x 2 Leptorhynchos squamatus subsp. squamatus, L. tenuiflorus Scaly, Wiry Buttons 0.3 x 0.3–0.4 Lobelia anceps Angled Lobelia 0.3 x spreading Lomandra filiformis Wattle Mat-rush 0.3 x 0.2 Lomandra longifolia subsp. longifolia Spiny-headed Mat-rush 1 x 1.2 Microseris sp. 3 Yam Daisy 0.7 x 0.5 Patersonia fragilis, P. occidentalis Short, Long Purple-flag 0.2–0.4 x 0.4–0.6 Pelargonium australe Austral Stork’s-bill 0.6 x 1 Persicaria decipiens Slender Knotweed 0.6 x 1 Pimelea humilis Common Rice-flower 0.5 x 1 Selliera radicans Shiny Swamp-mat 0.4 x 1 Senecio hispidulus, S. quadridentatus, S. tenuiflorus Rough, Cotton, Slender Fireweed 0.6–1.3 x 0.3–1 Senecio minimus Shrubby Fireweed 1 x 0.5 Stylidium armeria Common Trigger-plant 0.6 x 0.3 Tetragonia implexicoma Bower Spinach 2.5 x 2 Thysanotus tuberosus subsp. tuberosus Common Fringe-lily 0.3 x 0.2 Tricoryne elatior Yellow Rush-lily 0.5 x 0.5 Veronica calycina Hairy Speedwell 0.2 x 0.5 Viola hederacea Ivy-leaf Violet 0.1 x spreading Wahlenbergia gracilis, W. stricta subsp. stricta Tall, Sprawling Bluebell 0.5 x 1, 0.9 x 0.4 Xanthorrhoea australis Austral Grass-tree 3 x 2 Xanthorrhoea minor subsp. lutea Small Grass-tree 1.2 x 1 GRASSES, Austrodanthonia caespitosa, A. geniculata, A. racemosa var. racemosa, A. setacea Wallaby Grass 0.3–1 x 0.2–0.4 Austrodanthonia penicillata Slender Wallaby-grass 1 x 0.4 SEDGES Austrostipa mollis, A. pubinodis Supple, Tall Spear-grass 1.5 x 0.3–0.5 AND Austrostipa muelleri Wiry Spear-grass 1 x 0.5 RUSHES Austrostipa rudis subsp. rudis, A. semibarbata Veined, Fibrous Spear-grass 1.2–1.5 x 0.4 Baumea acuta Pale Twig-sedge 0.3 x 0.4 Carex appressa Tall Sedge 1.2 x 1 Deyeuxia quadriseta Reed Bent-grass 1 x 0.2 Dichelachne siebriana Plume Grass 1 x 0.4 Distichlis distichophylla Australian Salt-grass 0.2 x spreading Eragrostis brownii Common Love-grass 0.4 x 0.3 Gahnia sieberiana Red-fruit Saw-sedge 3 x 3 Imperata cylindrica Blady Grass 1 x 0.5 Juncus pallidus Pale Rush 2.3 x 1 Lepidosperma concavum Sandhill Sword-sedge 1 x 0.7 Lepidosperma filiforme Common Rapier-sedge 0.9 x 0.9 Lepidosperma laterale Variable Sword-sedge 1.2 x 1 Microlaena stipoides var. stipoides Weeping Grass 1 x 0.3 Notodanthonia semiannularis Wetland Wallaby-grass 0.6 x 0.3 Poa labillardierei var. labillardierei Common Tussock-grass 1.2 x 1 Poa morrisii Soft Tussock-grass 1 x 0.7 Poa poiformis var. poiformis Coast Tussock-grass 1 x 1 Poa sieberiana var. sieberiana Grey Tussock-grass 0.9 x 0.4 Poa tenera Slender Tussock-grass 0.2 x spreading Themeda triandra Kangaroo Grass 1 x 0.5 Speak to your local indigenous nursery regarding the availability of plants listed above. Height for grasses, sedges and rushes is to the top of the flowering stem. Warringine Ck Bittern Coastal Somers Region Wetlands Stony Point Ecological Vegetation Class Map Woolleys Rd This map is based on EVC maps of the modelled T h distribution of pre-1750 vegetation boundaries (NRE 2002). e E Less than 40% of native vegetation cover is remaining sp lana today within the Somers region. Lorna’s de Triangle Bushland It is intended as a guide for determining the EVC in which Reserve you will be planting. For more detailed information Disney St regarding the boundaries of EVCs in this area, contact Mornington Peninsula Shire Customer Service. South Beach Rd Balnarring Rd Bittern Western Port k C s k ic rr e M Frankston - Flinders Rd Stony Warrawee Rd Stanleys Rd s Rd Sandy er Coolart Rd Point d n li F Point Rd Merricks Rd Balnarring - Coolart HMAS Hanns Creek Wetlands Frankston Reserve Cerberus Rd Lord Somers Rd Balnarring Beach Rd Camp HillSomers Rd d Swamp Scrub / Wet Heathland Mosaic Tasman R Areas indicated with dark blue once contained Merricks Ck entrance patches of Swamp Scrub or Wet Heathland depending on soil conditions. Contact Mornington Peninsula Customer Service for more information regarding Wet Heathland plants. 1. Grassy Woodland Some other EVCs may be shown on the map that are not 2. Swamp Scrub included in the legend. Research and publishing: Matthew Dell and Linda Bester 3. Heathy Woodland Biodiversity Protection Universal Ecology Services, Victoria Grants or rebates are available Photographs: from Council for owners of land M. Dell and the Department of Sustainability and Environment 4. Damp Heathy Woodland over two hectares. Conditions EVC mapping: State of Victoria apply. Contact the Customer Service Centre. EVC tables derived from lists by Jeff Yugovic and the Department of Sustainability 5. Lowland Forest and Environment. Nomenclature follows Ross JH and Walsh NG (2003) A Census of the Vascular Plants of Victoria. 7th Edition. Royal Botanic Gardens, Melbourne. 6. Coast Banksia Woodland The rights to photographs remain with the acknowledged owners. Swampy Riparian Woodland - see Flinders region brochure for plant list..
Recommended publications
  • The Bundanon Trust Properties Are Mapped by the NSW National Vegetation Survey As Supporting Over 14 Different Vegetation Communities
    4 FLORA The Bundanon Trust properties are mapped by the NSW National Vegetation Survey as supporting over 14 different vegetation communities. The Living Land- scape project incorporates many of these communities. Image: Bloodwood trees in blossom at Riversdale, February 2015 VEGETATION COMMUNITIES SUMMARY Groups of native plants that grow in association with each other on a specific soil type, being described as distinct “floristic assemblages”. These floristic assemblages provide an equally distinctive suite of native fauna species with their preferred habitat; when combined the flora, fauna and soil are considered to be an Ecological Community. Floristic assemblages are the framework around which Ecological Communities are defined. These assemblages are described with reference to the dominant plant species, usually trees, and the other vegetation strata which might include mid-storey, shrub, vine, groundcover and forb layers. Comprehensive floristic descriptions might also include fungi, mosses, and lichens; however, these are not presently considered in the “scientific determinations” or legal descriptions of the Ecological Communities made by the Department of Environment and Climate Change Scientific Committee. The floristic assemblages were mapped on site by the NSW Department of Environment and Conservation and the NSW Department of Natural Resources. This report, Native Vegetation of Southeast NSW (NVSNSW), was based on the South Coast - Illawarra Vegetation Integration (SCIVI) Project, which aimed to integrate many previous vegetation classification and mapping works to produce a single regional classification and map plus information on regional conservation status of vegetation types. Survey work for the Land Management Plan generally supported the overall pattern of distribution within study area of the community distribution as mapped by NVSNSW.
    [Show full text]
  • FNCV Register of Photos
    FNCV Register of photos - natural history (FNCVSlideReg is in Library computer: My computer - Local Disc C - Documents and settings - Library) [Square brackets] - added or updated name Slide number Title Place Date Source Plants SN001-1 Banksia marginata Grampians 1974 001-2 Xanthorrhoea australis Labertouche 17 Nov 1974 001-3 Xanthorrhoea australis Anglesea Oct 1983 001-4 Regeneration after bushfire Anglesea Oct 1983 001-5 Grevillea alpina Bendigo 1975 001-6 Glossodia major / Grevillea alpina Maryborough 19 Oct 1974 001-7 Discarded - out of focus 001-8 [Asteraceae] Anglesea Oct 1983 001-9 Bulbine bulbosa Don Lyndon 001-10 Senecio elegans Don Lyndon 001-11 Scaevola ramosissima (Hairy fan-flower) Don Lyndon 001-12 Brunonia australis (Blue pincushion) Don Lyndon 001-13 Correa alba Don Lyndon 001-14 Correa alba Don Lyndon 001-15 Calocephalus brownii (Cushion bush) Don Lyndon 001-16 Rhagodia baccata [candolleana] (Seaberry saltbush) Don Lyndon 001-17 Lythrum salicaria (Purple loosestrife) Don Lyndon 001-18 Carpobrotus sp. (Pigface in the sun) Don Lyndon 001-19 Rhagodia baccata [candolleana] Inverloch Don Lyndon 001-20 Epacris impressa Don Lyndon 001-21 Leucopogon virgatus (Beard-heath) Don Lyndon 001-22 Stackhousia monogyna (Candles) Don Lyndon 001-23 Correa reflexa (yellow) Don Lyndon 001-24 Prostanthera sp. Don Lyndon Fungi 002-1 Stinkhorn fungus Aseroe rubra Buckety Plains 30/12/1974 Margarey Lester 002-2 Fungi collection: Botany Group excursion Dom Dom Saddle 28 May 1988 002-3 Aleuria aurantia Aug 1966 R&M Jennings Bairnsdale FNC 002-4
    [Show full text]
  • Wednesday Walk on a Mayfield Road Property – 28 September 2011
    Wednesday Walk on a Mayfield Road Property – 28 September 2011 Mayfield Road runs off Cullulla Road not far from Tarago, NSW. We visited the property on a cold day in June then returned to see some spring flowers. The property is heavily wooded in parts but also has some grassland and a creek. We saw a great display of many Pomaderris elliptica in full flower, also the Pultenaea villifera was quite spectacular - a hillside of it. We also saw lots of Stypandra glauca, Rhytidosporum procumbens, Lissanthe strigosa and Leucopogon fraseri flowering and evidence of many Patersonia sericea and P. longifolia flowers and some spectacular Acacia decurrens just finishing. A highlight for the owner was the recording of 6 orchid species. We found many Petalochilus fuscatus flowering, a few P. carneus (just starting), some good patches of Pterostylis pedunculata, one Diuris pardina, some Microtis sp. leaves and some rosettes which we marked for checking when flowering. Pultenaea villifera Image by Roger Farrow Carpet of lichen Image by Roger Farrow Pomaderris elliptica Image by Roger Farrow Lissanthe strigosa Image by Roger Farrow Diuris pardina Image by Roger Farrow Petalochilus fuscatus Image by Roger Farrow Rhytidosporum procumbens Image by Roger Farrow Leucopogon fraseri Image by Roger Pterostylis pedunculata Image by Roger Farrow Farrow Prepared by the Wednesday Walkers of the Australian Native Plants Society, Canberra Region Plant List for Mayfield Road Property - 22 June 2011 & 28 September 2011 ? indicates that those present were unsure of the plant name Acacia ? deanei ssp. paucijuga Gonocarpus tetragynus Acacia decurrens Goodenia hederacea Acacia falciformis Haloragis heterophylla Acacia mearnsii Helichrysum leucopsideum Acacia terminalis Hibbertia calycina Amyema pendula Hibbertia obtusifolia Aristida ramosa Hydrocotyle laxiflora Asplenium flabellifolium Hydrocotyle tripartita Astroloma humifusum Hypericum gramineum Austrodanthonia sp.
    [Show full text]
  • Lomatia Fraseri
    Plants of South Eastern New South Wales Flowers and leaves. Photographer Richard Hartland, Mt Stirling Flowering stem. Photographer Don Wood, Monga State Forest east of Braidwood Open seed cases with seeds. Australian Plant Image Line drawing. u. flowering branch. G Thomlinson, Index, photographer Murray Fagg, Australian National National Herbarium of Victoria, © 2021 Royal Botanic Botanic Gardens, Canberra, ACT. Gardens Board, Melbourne Shrub. Australian Plant Image Index, photographer Geoff Butler, New England N P Common name Silky Lomatia, Tree Lomatia, Forest Lomatia Family Proteaceae Where found Forest. Ranges, mainly south of the Kings Highway. Notes Shrub or tree to about 10 m high. Bark rough, with longitudinal fissures and horizontal lenticels, grey to dark brown. Buds and young stems rusty-hairy with appressed T-shaped hairs (needs a hand lens or a macro app on your phone/tablet to see), older stems eventually becoming hairless. Leaves alternating up the stems, 6–13 cm long, 10–35 mm wide, margins deeply or shallowly toothed, occasionally entire, or sometimes deeply dissected; upper surface dull green and hairless, lower surface pale yellow-green and dull or silky with appressed fine hairs, sometimes rusty hairy, tips blunt to pointed. Flowers white to cream, densely hairy, tubular, the tube slit by the style in bud, with 4 'petals' 7–9 mm long, splitting to the base when the flower is fully open. Flowers paired, in clusters 8–12 cm long. Flowers summer. Seeds with one wing. Intergrades with Lomatia myricoides or with Lomatia ilicifolia when they grow together. PlantNET description: http://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl? page=nswfl&lvl=sp&name=Lomatia~fraseri (accessed 24 January, 2021) Author: Betty Wood.
    [Show full text]
  • Action Statement
    Action Statement Flora and F auna Guarantee Act 1988 No. 211 Colquhoun Grevillea Grevillea celata This Action Statement is based on a draft Recovery Plan prepared for this species by DSE under contract to the Australian Government Department of the Environment, Water, Heritage and the Arts. Description Colquhoun Grevillea (Grevillea celata ) is an erect and open, to low and dense, root-suckering shrub, 0.4–1.8 m tall (Molyneux 1995). The leaves are elliptic, alternate, hairy and grey-green, to 44 x 18 mm. The lower leaf surface is almost white and densely hairy; the leaf margins are curved under, sometimes almost obscuring the lower surface (DSE 2005a). Flowers appear from July to February, and are red and yellow with curved tubes about 12 mm long. The flowers are hairy outside but densely hairy inside, and split into four lobes to release a red, hairy style to 25 mm long (Molyneux 1995; DSE 2005a). The fruit is a leathery, hairy capsule, longitudinally ridged, which splits to release winged seeds (Walsh & Distribution in Victoria Entwisle 1996). (Flora Information System DSE 2007) Colquhoun Grevillea is very similar to Golden Grevillea ( Grevillea chrysophaea ), which does not root-sucker and lacks red coloration on the perianth (Walsh & Entwisle 1996). Another similar species is Cat’s Claw Grevillea ( Grevillea alpina ). individuals exist. These plants occur in nine Cat’s Claw Grevillea, however, generally does not populations. The extent of range and abundance of root-sucker, and has a more prominent tongue-like Colquhoun Grevillea prior to European settlement nectary and usually a shorter pistil (10 - 20.5 mm is unknown.
    [Show full text]
  • Report on the Grimwade Plant Collection of Percival St John and Botanical Exploration of Mt Buffalo National Park (Victoria, Australia)
    Report on the Grimwade Plant Collection of Percival St John and Botanical Exploration of Mt Buffalo National Park (Victoria, Australia) Alison Kellow Michael Bayly Pauline Ladiges School of Botany, The University of Melbourne July, 2007 THE GRIMWADE PLANT COLLECTION, MT BUFFALO Contents Summary ...........................................................................................................................3 Mt Buffalo and its flora.....................................................................................................4 History of botanical exploration........................................................................................5 The Grimwade plant collection of Percival St John..........................................................8 A new collection of plants from Mt Buffalo - The Miegunyah Plant Collection (2006/2007) ....................................................................................................................................13 Plant species list for Mt Buffalo National Park...............................................................18 Conclusion.......................................................................................................................19 Acknowledgments...........................................................................................................19 References .......................................................................................................................20 Appendix 1 Details of specimens in the Grimwade Plant Collection.............................22
    [Show full text]
  • Correa Mail Newsletter No 336 – April 2018
    Correa Mail Newsletter No 336 – April 2018 peat moss makes a great medium. Use a dust mask March Meeting - Propagating when handling perlite and wet it to control dust. The pH should be around 5.5 – 6. Our speaker for March was Tony Hughes, a well- Tony prefers ‘squat pots’ placed on a shallow tray known propagator and lecturer in horticulture. Tony did with geo-cloth to provide water through capillary his apprenticeship with John Mahoney and taught at action. It is important to provide water without wetting The Gordon for 16 years. He spent a few years in the foliage. He suggests watering before midday in Mildura, but is back at the Gordon now, teaching winter is essential or the humidity levels over night will propagation and plant identification, and does one day be too great and fungal issues will result. Don’t feed the a week at Federation University in Ballarat. He has done cuttings. Feeding encourages leaf growth before the ‘more than 1,000,000’ cuttings in his life and is new plant has a sufficient root structure to support it. passionate about natives. Once the cuttings have established roots they need to Tony says that striking cuttings is the easy part – be potted on. A very gentle tug will show if roots are caring for them until they are ready for planting is the established. Remove the cuttings from the medium hard part. He works in a large hothouse on the East carefully as the roots are very fragile. Tony likes to lay Geelong campus (formerly East Tech) where a grant has the pot sideways and tip the contents gently along the been made to upgrade to computerised heat and table.
    [Show full text]
  • 3-2-Effects-Of-Fire-Regime-On-Plant
    Foster, C. N., Barton, P. S., MacGregor, C. I., Catford, J. A., Blanchard, W., & Lindenmayer, D. B. Effects of fire regime on plant species richness and composition differ among forest, woodland and heath vegetation. Applied Vegetation Science, 21(1): 132-143. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/avsc.12345 Page 1 of 29 Applied Vegetation Science EFFECTS OF FIRE REGIME ON PLANT SPECIES RICHNESS AND COMPOSITION DIFFER AMONG FOREST, WOODLAND AND HEATH VEGETATION Foster, C.N. (corresponding author, [email protected])1,2 Barton, P.S. ([email protected])1 MacGregor, C.I. ([email protected])1,2,3 Catford, J.A. ([email protected])1,2,4,5 Blanchard, W. ([email protected]) 1 Lindenmayer, D.B. ([email protected]) 1,2,3 1 Fenner School of Environment and Society, The Australian National University, Canberra, ACT, 2601, Australia 2Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Environmental Decisions, The Australian National University, Canberra, ACT, 2601, Australia 3The National Environmental Science Program, Threatened Species Recovery Hub and the Long-term Ecological Research Network, Fenner School of Environment and Society, The Australian National University, Canberra, ACT, 2601, Australia 4School of BioSciences, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, Vic, 3010, Australia 5Biological Sciences, University of Southampton, Highfield Campus, Southampton, SO17 1BJ, UK. Keywords: community composition, competition, disturbance regime, dry sclerophyll vegetation, fire management, fire frequency, Sydney Coastal Heath, Sydney Coastal Forest, species richness Nomenclature: Harden (1991) for species, Taws (1997) for plant communities Running Head: Fire regimes in dry sclerophyll vegetation Applied Vegetation Science Page 2 of 29 1 ABSTRACT 2 Question: Do the effects of fire regimes on plant species richness and composition differ among 3 floristically similar vegetation types? 4 Location: Booderee National Park, south-eastern Australia.
    [Show full text]
  • Best Local Native Plants for Use in Bushfire Prone Locations
    Best local native plants for use in Bushfire Prone Locations In the wake of bushfire, many local gardeners seek to replant landscaped areas with so called ‘low flammability’ species. It is important to understand that under extreme bushfire conditions, all vegetative material can burn. However, some species are less likely to ignite or burn intensely than others, and some species have growth characteristics which make them less likely to promote the spread of fire. If you are replanting the areas surrounding your dwelling or other areas within your Asset Protection Zone (APZ), careful attention must be paid to both species selection and garden layout. Consider the usefulness and suitability of each existing or proposed planting. Be mindful of the plant’s ultimate height and spread, and don’t overplant, or alternatively be prepared to prune or cull as plants mature. Both vertical and horizontal separation between canopy components or shrub clusters needs to be retained so as to reduce the potential for fire to spread. Whether selecting new plants for your garden, or species for retention in your APZ, there are a few key characteristics to look for: • Relatively high moisture content of leaves (‘mesic’ or rainforest type species, but these need to remain well watered if they are to retain their fire suppressant characteristics) • Low levels of volatile oil in leaves (crush and sniff the leaf to see if you can detect a strong smell) • Large or hard leaves with simple margins • Smooth, hard, or persistent bark, rather than flakey or ribbon bark • Plants that don’t accumulate a lot of dead leaf and stem material below them or suspended in the foliage.
    [Show full text]
  • List of Native Plants in Jerberra Estate
    Native Plants in Jerberra Estate* SCIENTIFIC NAME COMMON NAME Acacia binervata Two-veined Hickory Acacia brownei Prickly Moses Acacia irrorata Green Wattle Acacia longifolia Sydney Golden Wattle Acacia myrtifolia Myrtle Wattle Acacia suaveolens Sweet Wattle Acacia terminalis Sunshine Wattle Acacia ulicifolia Prickly Moses Acmena smithii Lilly Pilly Adiantum aethiopicum Maidenhair fern Allocasuarina littoralis Black She-oak Anisopogon avenaceus Spear Oat Grass Aristida vagans Three-awned Spear Grass Banksia paludosa Swamp Banksia Banksia spinulosa Hairpin Banksia Baumea juncea Twig Rush SCIENTIFIC NAME COMMON NAME Billardiera scandens Apple Berry Boronia pinnata Pinnate Boronia Bossiaea obcordata Spiny Bossiaea Breynia oblongifolia Coffee Bush Brunoniella pumilio Dwarf Blue Trumpet Caladenia carnea Pink Fingers Callicoma serratifolia Callicoma Callistemon rigidus A bottle brush Calochlaena dubia False Bracken Fern Cassytha pubescens Common Devils Twine Cassytha glabella Slender Devils Twine Comesperma ericinum Match Heads Corymbia gummifera Red Bloodwood Corymbia maculata Spotted Gum Cymbidium suave Snake Flower Dampiera stricta Blue Dampiera Daviesia ulicifolia Gorse Bitter-pea Dianella caerulea var.caerulea Paroo Lily Dianella caerulea var.producta Paroo Lily Dichelachne crinita Longhair Plume grass SCIENTIFIC NAME COMMON NAME Dichelachne micrantha Plume Grass Dichondra repens Kidney Weed Dodonaea triquetra Hop Bush Drosera spathulata Sundew Drosera peltata Sundew Echinopogon caespitosus Tufted Hedgehog Grass Elaeocarpus reticulatus Blueberry
    [Show full text]
  • Best Local Native Plants for Use in Bushfire Prone Locations
    Best local native plants for use in Bushfire Prone Locations In the wake of bushfire, many local gardeners seek to replant landscaped areas with so called ‘low flammability’ species. It is important to understand that under extreme bushfire conditions, all vegetative material can burn. However, some species are less likely to ignite or burn intensely than others, and some species have growth characteristics which make them less likely to promote the spread of fire. If you are replanting the areas surrounding your dwelling or other areas within your Asset Protection Zone (APZ), careful attention must be paid to both species selection and garden layout. Consider the usefulness and suitability of each existing or proposed planting. Be mindful of the plant’s ultimate height and spread, and don’t overplant, or alternatively be prepared to prune or cull as plants mature. Both vertical and horizontal separation between canopy components or shrub clusters needs to be retained so as to reduce the potential for fire to spread. Whether selecting new plants for your garden, or species for retention in your APZ, there are a few key characteristics to look for: • Relatively high moisture content of leaves (‘mesic’ or rainforest type species, but these need to remain well watered if they are to retain their fire suppressant characteristics) • Low levels of volatile oil in leaves (crush and sniff the leaf to see if you can detect a strong smell) • Large or hard leaves with simple margins • Smooth, hard, or persistent bark, rather than flakey or ribbon bark • Plants that don’t accumulate a lot of dead leaf and stem material below them or suspended in the foliage.
    [Show full text]
  • Wednesday Walk to Monga National Park – 12/3/08
    Wednesday Walk to Monga National Park – 12/3/08 Our trips to Monga Forest are mainly drives with various random stops on the loop from the western side via Granite Bluff Forest Road, Saddleback Road, Milo Road to River Forest Road – and includes the Penance Grove, Mongarlowe picnic area and Dasyurus picnic area, as well as the link to the Corn Trail. There are maps at both the eastern and western entrances to Monga National Park, as well as at the picnic area. There is wet sclerophyll forest as well as some rainforest. Favourite times are March to see Eucryphia moorei flowering and October for the waratahs – Telopea mongaensis and T. oreades. On 12/3/08 we stopped at the Dasyurus picnic area first and saw a Telopea mongaensis flowering and many berries on the female plants of Tasmannia lanceolata. We then went to the Mongarlowe picnic area and did the short walk to Penance Grove and saw many Eucryphia moorei flowering – there were carpets of petals. We returned to Braidwood via the Reidsdale Road from the Monga township and saw a stunning display of tree ferns. Monga National Park Tasmannia lanceolata berries Image by Jean Geue Image by Jean Geue Inside Penance Grove Probably the home of the southern tree-dwelling Image by Jean Geue funnelweb spider Hadronyche cerberea. One of the features of this funnel web spider species is the double entrance seen clearly in the photo. Image by Roger Farrow Prepared by the Wednesday Walkers of the Australian Native Plants Society, Canberra Region Eucryphia moorei Eucryphia moorei seedling growing out of a tree Image by Jean Geue fern base Image by Roger Farrow Plant List for Monga National Park from a number of visits ? indicates that those present were unsure of the plant name.
    [Show full text]