In south-western Australia, areas of native forest and woodland on farmland left after agricultural clearing (remnants) have in recent times been subject to chronic disturbance by grazing livestock. We analysed adjacent grazed and ungrazed sites to assess the effects of grazing disturbance on the scleropyhll woodland community. Species richness and diversity were reduced in heavily-grazed sites and floristic dissimilarity between grazed and ungrazed sites was high. In the heavily-grazed sites, exotic species were 46% to 48% of the species recorded. Frequency and cover of native perennial species was significantly reduced in the heavily-grazed sites and in a lightly-grazed site. There was a significant increase in the frequency and cover of ...
This thesis examines the re-establishment of native plant species on abandoned pastures in Tasmania...
Agricultural management influences the species richness and composition of ground-storey vegetation ...
Clearing of native vegetation and changes to disturbance regimes have resulted in dense regeneration...
Grazing by livestock has led to passive clearing of the majority of remaining areas of native vegeta...
This paper documents changes in the floristic composition of Eucalyptus marginata Donn (jarrah) wood...
Grazing by domestic livestock in native woodlands can have major effects on ecosystem functioning by...
The semi-arid rangelands of tropical North Queensland have suffered a major decline in land conditio...
Even when no baseline data are available, the impacts of 150 years of livestock grazing on natural g...
Livestock grazing is often thought to enhance native plant species co-existence in remnant grassland...
Floristic diversity was compared across boundaries where the trees have been cleared in semi-arid br...
The relative impacts of grazing, fire and invasion by buffel grass (Cenchrus ciliaris) on floristic ...
Grazing by domestic livestock has greatly degraded many Australian ecosystems and its legacy will be...
Plant communities and soil properties in many dryland ecosystems have changed dramatically over the ...
Managing native pastures for sustainable and economic production requires a good understanding of gr...
The process of natural regeneration is critical for sustaining remnant native vegetation and the eco...
This thesis examines the re-establishment of native plant species on abandoned pastures in Tasmania...
Agricultural management influences the species richness and composition of ground-storey vegetation ...
Clearing of native vegetation and changes to disturbance regimes have resulted in dense regeneration...
Grazing by livestock has led to passive clearing of the majority of remaining areas of native vegeta...
This paper documents changes in the floristic composition of Eucalyptus marginata Donn (jarrah) wood...
Grazing by domestic livestock in native woodlands can have major effects on ecosystem functioning by...
The semi-arid rangelands of tropical North Queensland have suffered a major decline in land conditio...
Even when no baseline data are available, the impacts of 150 years of livestock grazing on natural g...
Livestock grazing is often thought to enhance native plant species co-existence in remnant grassland...
Floristic diversity was compared across boundaries where the trees have been cleared in semi-arid br...
The relative impacts of grazing, fire and invasion by buffel grass (Cenchrus ciliaris) on floristic ...
Grazing by domestic livestock has greatly degraded many Australian ecosystems and its legacy will be...
Plant communities and soil properties in many dryland ecosystems have changed dramatically over the ...
Managing native pastures for sustainable and economic production requires a good understanding of gr...
The process of natural regeneration is critical for sustaining remnant native vegetation and the eco...
This thesis examines the re-establishment of native plant species on abandoned pastures in Tasmania...
Agricultural management influences the species richness and composition of ground-storey vegetation ...
Clearing of native vegetation and changes to disturbance regimes have resulted in dense regeneration...