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THE REPRODUCTIVE ECOLOGY OF TWO TERRESTRIAL ORCHIDS, CALADENIA RIGIDA AND CALADENIA TENTACULATA RENATE FAAST Submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy School of Earth and Environmental Sciences The University of Adelaide, South Australia December, 2009 i . DEcLARATION This work contains no material which has been accepted for the award of any other degree or diploma in any university or other tertiary institution to Renate Faast and, to the best of my knowledge and belief, contains no material previously published or written by another person, except where due reference has been made in the text. I give consent to this copy of my thesis when deposited in the University Library, being made available for loan and photocopying, subject to the provisions of the Copyright Act 1968. The author acknowledges that copyright of published works contained within this thesis (as listed below) resides with the copyright holder(s) of those works. I also give permission for the digital version of my thesis to be made available on the web, via the University's digital research repository, the Library catalogue, the Australasian Digital Theses Program (ADTP) and also through web search engines. Published works contained within this thesis: Faast R, Farrington L, Facelli JM, Austin AD (2009) Bees and white spiders: unravelling the pollination' syndrome of C aladenia ri gída (Orchidaceae). Australian Joumal of Botany 57:315-325. Faast R, Facelli JM (2009) Grazrngorchids: impact of florivory on two species of Calademz (Orchidaceae). Australian Journal of Botany 57:361-372. Farrington L, Macgillivray P, Faast R, Austin AD (2009) Evaluating molecular tools for Calad,enia (Orchidaceae) species identification. -
Common Indigenous Plant Species of the District Council of Mount Barker
COMMON INDIGENOUS PLANT SPECIES OF THE DISTRICT COUNCIL OF MOUNT BARKER BOTANIC NAME COMMON NAME 1 Acacia acinacea wreath wattle 2 Acacia myrtifolia var. myrtifolia myrtle wattle 3 Acacia paradoxa kangaroo thorn 4 Acacia pycnantha golden wattle 5 Acacia retinodes silver wattle 6 Acacia spinescens spiny wattle 7 Acrotriche affinis ridged ground-berry 8 Acrotriche serrulate cushion ground-berry 9 Allocasuarina muelleriana ssp. Muelleriana common oak-bush 10 Allocasuarina striata stalked oak-bush 11 Allocasuarina verticillate drooping sheoak 12 Arthropodium strictum chocolate lily 13 Astroloma conostephioides flame heath 14 Astroloma humifusum cranberry heath 15 Banksia marginate silver banksia 16 Billardiera cymosa sweet apple-berry 17 Billardiera versicolor yellow-flower apple-berry 18 Bossiaea prostrata creeping bossiaea 19 Brunonia australis blue pincushion 20 Bulbine bulbosa native leek 21 Bursaria spinosa sweet bursaria 22 Callistemon sieberi river bottlebrush 23 Calytrix tetragona fringe myrtle 24 Carex breviculmis short-stem sedge 25 Carex inversa var. inversa knob sedge 26 Carex sp. sedge 27 Chloris truncata windmill grass 28 Chrysocephalum apiculatum common everlasting 29 Chrysocephalum baxteri white everlasting 30 Clematis microphylla old man's beard 31 Correa glabra rock correa 32 Cotula australis common cotula 33 Cyperus vaginatus flat sedge 34 Dampiera dysantha dampiera 35 Danthonia caespitose common wallaby-grass 36 Danthonia geniculata kneed wallaby-grass 37 Danthonia sp. wallaby-grass 38 Daviesia leptophylla narrow-leaf bitter-pea 39 Daviesia ulicifolia gorse bitter-pea 40 Dianella revoluta var. revolute black-anther flax-lily 41 Dillwynia hispida red parrot-pea 42 Dodonaea viscose sticky hop-bush 43 Dodonaea viscosa ssp. Spatulate Wedge-leaf hop-bush 44 Epacris impressa common heath 45 Eucalyptus camaldulensis var. -
Taxonomy of the South Australian Species Allied to Hakea Ulicina R. Br
J. Adelaide Bot. Gard. 7(3): 249-271 (1985) TAXONOMY OF THE SOUTH AUSTRALIAN SPECIES ALLIED TO HAKEA ULICINA R. BR. (PROTEACEAE) L. Haegi & W.R. Barker Adelaide Botanic Gardens and State Herbarium, North Terrace, Adelaide, South Australia 5000. Abstract Taking into account the recent publication of the new species H. repullulans HM. Lee from western Victoria and South Australia, it is shown that the name H ulicina, widely used in the past, doe.s not apply to South Australian Hakea. The name H. carinata F. Muell. ex Meissner is re-instated for a species endemic to the Flinders and Mt Lofty Ranges and the South Eastern region. H muelleriana J. Black is confirmed as a distinct species, occurring in drier regions from Eyre Peninsula to the South Eastern region and extending to Kangaroo Island and Victoria. The occurrence of exceptionally broad-leaved forms of this species on Kangaroo Island warrants further biological and taxonomic investigation. H. aenigma W.R. Barker & Haegi, a Kangaroo Island endemic apparently most closely related to H. repullutans, is described. This new species is unusual in its sterility, apparent genetic uniformity and complete dependence on suckering as a means of reproduction. Introduction In the absence of any comprehensive treatment of Hakea since that of Bentham (1870) taxonomic concepts within the genus have developed largely in regional floras. Included among the species of Hakea treated in the most recent flora account for South Australia (Black 1948) were H muelleriana J. Black and H ulicina R. Br., including its variety var. latifolia J. Black. In a supplement to Black's Flora, Eichler (1965) expressed doubt about the rank of H muelleriana, suggesting it might better be treated at the infraspecific level, as "H ulicina var. -
Weed Risk Assessment for Hakea Salicifolia (Vent.) B. L. Burtt
Weed Risk Assessment for Hakea United States salicifolia (Vent.) B. L. Burtt. Department of Agriculture (Proteaceae) – Finger hakea Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service April 4, 2013 Version 1 Left: Habit of H. salicifolia. Right: Leaves and follicles of H. salicifolia (source of both images: Trevor James, http://www.nzflora.info/Index.html). Agency Contact: Plant Epidemiology and Risk Analysis Laboratory Center for Plant Health Science and Technology Plant Protection and Quarantine Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service United States Department of Agriculture 1730 Varsity Drive, Suite 300 Raleigh, NC 27606 Weed Risk Assessment for Hakea salicifolia Introduction Plant Protection and Quarantine (PPQ) regulates noxious weeds under the authority of the Plant Protection Act (7 U.S.C. § 7701-7786, 2000) and the Federal Seed Act (7 U.S.C. § 1581-1610, 1939). A noxious weed is defined as “any plant or plant product that can directly or indirectly injure or cause damage to crops (including nursery stock or plant products), livestock, poultry, or other interests of agriculture, irrigation, navigation, the natural resources of the United States, the public health, or the environment” (7 U.S.C. § 7701-7786, 2000). We use weed risk assessment (WRA)— specifically, the PPQ WRA model (Koop et al., 2012)—to evaluate the risk potential of plants, including those newly detected in the United States, those proposed for import, and those emerging as weeds elsewhere in the world. Because the PPQ WRA model is geographically and climatically neutral, it can be used to evaluate the baseline invasive/weed potential of any plant species for the entire United States or for any area within it. -
Kangaroo Island Coastline, South Australia
Kangaroo Island coastline, South Australia TERN gratefully acknowledges the many landholders across Kangaroo Island for their assistance and support during the project and for allowing access to their respective properties. Thank you to Pat Hodgens for his invaluable support and advice. Thanks also to the many volunteers, in particular Lachlan Pink and Max McQuillan, who helped to collect, curate and process the data and samples. Lastly, many thanks to staff from the South Australian Herbarium for undertaking the plant identifications. Citation: TERN (2020) Summary of Plots on Kangaroo Island, October 2018. Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network, Adelaide. Summary of Plots on Kangaroo Island ............................................................................................................................... 1 Acknowledgements............................................................................................................................................................. 2 Contents .............................................................................................................................................................................. 3 Introduction ........................................................................................................................................................................ 1 Accessing the Data ............................................................................................................................................................. 3 Point -
Plant Mating Systems in a Changing World
Review Plant mating systems in a changing world Christopher G. Eckert1*, Susan Kalisz2*, Monica A. Geber3*, Risa Sargent4*, Elizabeth Elle5*, Pierre-Olivier Cheptou6, Carol Goodwillie7, Mark O. Johnston8, John K. Kelly9, David A. Moeller10, Emmanuelle Porcher11, Richard H. Ree12, Mario Vallejo-Marı´n13 and Alice A. Winn14 1 Department of Biology, Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario K7L 3N6, Canada 2 Department of Biological Sciences, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15260, USA 3 Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA 4 Department of Biology, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario K1N 6N5, Canada 5 Department of Biological Sciences, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia V5A 1S6, Canada 6 UMR 5175 CEFE-CNRS, F-34293 Montpellier Cedex 05, France 7 Department of Biology, East Carolina University, Greenville, NC 27858, USA 8 Department of Biology, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia B3H 4J1, Canada 9 Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 66045-7534, USA 10 Department of Genetics, University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602, USA 11 UMR 7204 MNHN-UPMC-CNRS, F-75005 Paris, France 12 Botany Department, Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago, IL 60605, USA 13 School of Biological and Environmental Science, University of Stirling, Stirling FK9 4LA, UK 14 Department of Biological Science, Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL 32306, USA There is increasing evidence that human disturbance can impact on the ecology and evolution of plant mating sys- negatively impact plant–pollinator interactions such as tems. outcross pollination. We present a meta-analysis of 22 Most plant species are hermaphroditic and many are studies involving 27 plant species showing a significant self-compatible. -
Population Genetics of Hakea Carinata F. Muell. Ex Meissner (Proteaceae)
:ríl 1l îy 2" . ¿..r3 Population Genetics of Høkea carinata F. Muell. ex Meissner (Proteaceae) A thesis submitted in fulhlment of the requirements for the award of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy from The University of Adelaide by Gary Starr B.A.(Hons) Department of Applied and Molecular Ecology October 200L THE UNTVERSITY OF ADELAIDE AUSTRALIA I)eclaration This work contains no material which has been accepted for the award of any other degree or diploma in any university or other tertiary institution and, to the best of my knowledge and belief, contains no material previously published or written by another person, except where due reference has been made in the text. I give consent to this copy of my thesis, when deposited in the University Library, being available for loan and photocopying. .'Gary Starr Date: 2 If.ol ll Abstract This study is an examination of the population genetic structure and gene flow in a sclerophyllous plant species, Hakea carinata,that is endemic to South Australia. The species has a naturally fragmented geographic distribution. It survives in very small populations by using a predominantly selfing mating system, however this is combined with very low levels of gene flow and substantial differentiation between populations. The distribution of genetic diversity in H. carinata was represented by a sample of 30 populations covering the range of the species. The level of genetic diversity in the species is concomitant with expectations for similar woody perennial shrubs, but populations contain little variation and most is represented as between population differences. Overall gene flow between populations is insufficient to prevent further population differentiation. -
Natives in Nature Stock List
Specialty Plants Grafted Dawinias Darwinia grafted Assorted Grafted Eucalyptus Eucalyptus ficifolia "Orange Splen- der" Eucalyptus ficifolia "Summer Beauty " Eucalyptus ficifolia "Summer Red " Eucalyptus ficifolia "Wildfire " Standard Grevilleas Grevillea 'Aussie Crawl Grevillea 'Banksii"red and White Stock List Grevillea 'Banksii" prostate Grevillea 'Bipinnatifida" Grevillea 'Bronze Rambler" Grevillea "Nudiflora " Grevillea "Obtusifolia" Grevillea "Plurijuga Grevillea "Royal Mantle " Grevillea "Thelemannia" Grevillea 'Aussie Crawl RMB 840 Star and Arrow Road Grafted Hakeas Coromandel East 5157 Hakea bucculeata Red pokers. PH 8388 2777 Hakea franciscana Hakea multilineata Grass-leaf hakea FAX 8388 2711 Grass Trees [email protected] Xanthorrhea quadragulata Grass tree-Advanced sizes available www.natives.net.au Stock available in : P2 tube stock Pots from 125-200mm Natives in nature Prices on request Please note : stock lists are a guide only to our stock. Stock lists are a guide only to our stock. Plants are always subject to availability. Coromandel Native Nursery- Price List Coromandel Native Nursery- Price List Botanical Name Common name Botanical Name Common name A T Abelia grandifora nana Dwarf Abelia Templetonia retusa Cockies Tounges/Coral Bush Acacia acinacea Gold Dust Wattle Themeda Kangaroo Grass . Acacia ambligona prostate Wattle Themeda 'Mingo' Blue mingo grass Acacia aneura Mulga Themeda triandra Red Grass Acacia argyrophylia Silver Mulga Thryptomene saxicola Rock Thryptomene Acacia baileyana prostrate Cootamundra Wattle Thryptomene saxicola 'Mingenew' Rock Thryptomene Thryptomene saxicola "Super Nova " Acacia baileyana purpurea Cootamundra Wattle Thryptomene stenophylla Acacia boormanii Snowy River Wattle Triglochin procerum Water Ribbons Acacia brachybotrys Grey Wattle Triglochin striatum Three-rib Arrowgrass Acacia burkittii Burkitts Wattle V Acacia calamifolia Wallowa Vittadinia blackii Western New Holland Daisy. -
Weed Risk Assessment for Hakea Gibbosa (Sm.) Cav. (Proteaceae)
Weed Risk Assessment for Hakea United States gibbosa (Sm.) Cav. (Proteaceae) – Department of Agriculture Rock hakea Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service April 8, 2012 Version 1 Flowers and leaves of Hakea gibbosa (source: John Tann, http://www.flickr.com/photos/31031835@N08/5946090124/). Agency Contact: Plant Epidemiology and Risk Analysis Laboratory Center for Plant Health Science and Technology Plant Protection and Quarantine Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service United States Department of Agriculture 1730 Varsity Drive, Suite 300 Raleigh, NC 27606 Weed Risk Assessment for Hakea gibbosa Introduction Plant Protection and Quarantine (PPQ) regulates noxious weeds under the authority of the Plant Protection Act (7 U.S.C. § 7701-7786, 2000) and the Federal Seed Act (7 U.S.C. § 1581-1610, 1939). A noxious weed is defined as “any plant or plant product that can directly or indirectly injure or cause damage to crops (including nursery stock or plant products), livestock, poultry, or other interests of agriculture, irrigation, navigation, the natural resources of the United States, the public health, or the environment” (7 U.S.C. § 7701-7786, 2000). We use weed risk assessment (WRA)—specifically, the PPQ WRA model (Koop et al., 2012)—to evaluate the risk potential of plants, including those newly detected in the United States, those proposed for import, and those emerging as weeds elsewhere in the world. Because the PPQ WRA model is geographically and climatically neutral, it can be used to evaluate the baseline invasive/weed potential of any plant species for the entire United States or for any area within it. -
Australian Journal of Botany
CSIRO PUBLISHING Australian Journal of Botany Volume 46,1998 ©CSIRO Australia 1998 An international journal for the publication of original research in plant science www.publish.csiro.au/journals/ajb All enquiries and manuscripts should be directed to Australian Journal of Botany CSIRO PUBLISHING PO Box 1139 (150 Oxford St) Collingwood Telephone:61 3 9662 7624 Vic. 3066 Facsimile:61 3 9662 7611 Australia Email:[email protected] Published by CSIROPUBLISHING for CSIRO Australia and the Australian Academy of Science 757 Index to Volume 46 Authors and Titles Allaway, W. G. See Hammill, K. A. Copson, G., and Whinam, J. Ash, J. E. See Willis, A. J. Response of vegetation on subantarctic Macquarie Island to reduced rabbit Austin, A. D., and Dangerfield, P. C. grazing 15 Biology of Mesostoa kerri (Insecta: Hymenoptera: Braconidae: Mesostoinae), Cowling, R. M. See Midgley, J. J. an endemic Australian wasp that causes Cowling, R. M., and Lamont, B. B. stem galls on Banksia marginata 559 On the nature of Gondwanan species flocks: diversity of Proteaceae in mediterranean Bach, C. E. south-western Australia and South Africa Seedling survivorship of the beach morning 335 glory, Ipomoea pes-caprae Cox, M. J. See Fensham, R. J. (Convolvulaceae) 123 Crane, C. E. See Shearer, B. L. Barnes, R. W. See Lynch, A. J. J. Crayn, D. M., Kron, K. A., Gadek, P. A., and Batson, M.-G. Quinn, C. J. Agrostis castellana (Poaceae), dominant Phylogenetics and evolution of epacrids: a Agrostis species, found in bent grass- molecular analysis using the plastid gene pastures in south-eastern Australia 697 rbcL with a reappraisal of the position of Bell, D. -
A Biological Survey of the South Australian Coastal Dune and Clifftop Vegetation 1996 - 1998
A BIOLOGICAL SURVEY OF THE SOUTH AUSTRALIAN COASTAL DUNE AND CLIFFTOP VEGETATION 1996 - 1998 BIOLOGICAL SURVEY Author Alison Oppermann Coast and Marine Section Environment Protection Agency 1999 The Biological Survey of the South Australian Coastal Dune and Clifftop Vegetation was carried out with the assistance of funds made available by the Commonwealth of Australia under the 1994-96 National Estate Grants Programs and the State Government of South Australia. The views and opinions expressed in this report are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the views or policies of the Australian Heritage Commission or the State Government of South Australia. The report may be cited as: Oppermann Alison (1999) A Biological Survey of the South Australian Coastal Dune and Clifftop Vegetation Coast and Marine Section Environment Protection Agency Department for Environment, Heritage and Aboriginal Affairs, South Australia. Copies of the report may be accessed in the libraries of: Environment Australia Housing, Environment and Planning GPO Box 636 or 1st Floor, Roma Mitchell House CANBERRA ACT 2601 136 North Terrace, ADELAIDE SA 5000 AUTHOR Alison Oppermann EDITORS Doug Fotheringham Kathie Stove All geolographical data from Statewide Map Library, Environmental Data Base of South Australia ISBN 1 876562 01 3 © Department for Environment, Heritage and Aboriginal Affairs Cover Photograph: Leucopogon parviflorus shrubland on quadrant DES00204 (KIS16716) Kangaroo Island Coastal Dune and Clifftop Vegetation Survey Foreword The survey was in response to considerable demand for information by local government state government and the community, particularly for rehabilitating degraded plant communities. This report provides information that will help ensure that South Australia’s coastal dune and clifftop plant communities can be restored and maintained in their natural state. -
2021 Autumn Plant Sale
Australian Plants Society (SA Region) Inc. 2021 Autumn Plant Sale - 10th & 11th April 2021 - Expected Plant List 70-75mm tubes 70-75mm tubes 70-75mm tubes $7 : Most tubestock $7 : Most tubestock $7 : Most tubestock $10 : A few rare or unusual $10 : A few rare or unusual $10 : A few rare or unusual Acacia acinacea Allocasuarina pusilla Banksia incana *** Acacia aneura *** Allocasuarina verticillata Banksia integrifolia Acacia barringtonensis Alpinia caerulea Banksia laevigata *** Acacia beckleri *** Alyogyne 'Burgundy Rose' Banksia laevigata ssp. fuscolutea *** Acacia brumalis Alyogyne hakeifolia Banksia lemanniana Acacia buxifolia *** Alyogyne hakeifolia 'Melissa Ann' Banksia marginata Acacia calamifolia Alyogyne hakeifolia 'Shelby Ann' Banksia media Acacia celastrifolia Alyogyne huegelii *** Banksia meisneri *** Acacia cognata (dwarf) Alyogyne huegelii (double flower) *** Banksia menziesii Acacia conferta Alyogyne huegelii (pink) Banksia nutans *** Acacia covenyi Alyogyne huegelii 'West Coast Gem' Banksia ornata Acacia dealbata *** Alyogyne huegelii (white) Banksia petiolaris Acacia doratoxylon *** Alyogyne 'Lavender Rose' Banksia pilostylis *** Acacia floribunda Alyogyne 'Thelma' Banksia praemorsa Acacia gillii Anigozanthos flavidus (orange) *** Banksia praemorsa (burgundy) *** Acacia glaucoptera Anigozanthos manglesii Banksia praemorsa (yellow) Acacia howittii Anigozanthos 'Yellow Gem' Banksia robur Acacia imbricata Anthocercis littorea *** Banksia scabrella *** Acacia inaequilatera Anthosachne scabra *** Banksia sceptrum *** Acacia