Knowledge of the age at which seedlings begin to flower and set seed (i.e. primary juvenile period) is required for understanding the ecology and appropriate management of fire-killed species (i.e. obligate seeders) in frequently burnt landscapes. This paper documents the variation in age at first flowering by 15 fire-killed shrubs of sandstone and sand plain woodlands of central and north-west Queensland. In only two species, Acacia acradenia and Acacia gonoclada, were more than half of the individuals examined beginning to produce seed within 3 or 4 years of post-fire germination. Three species had not begun any flowering or seeding within 3 years of germination (Acacia hammondii, Acacia monticola and Acacia shirleyi)
Seedlings of the native twining forbs Galactia tenuiflora and Pycnospora lutescens, the grass Hetero...
Abstract. The fire-prone sandstone Arnhem Plateau is recognised as an international centre of plant ...
Unseasonal fire occurrence is increasing globally, driven by climate change and other human activity...
Regular prescribed burning to manage the accumulation of flammable live and dead vegetation(fuel) is...
Intervals between fires are critical for the persistence of obligate-seeding shrubs, and are often u...
Plant reproductive phenology has evolved to enable species to persist within the constraints of the ...
This paper examines the effects of seedling size and age on fire tolerance of Allosyncarpia ternata ...
In arid Australia, fires in different seasons often result in markedly different recruitment rates o...
Anthropogenic modifications to climate and natural fire regimes are occurring globally, leading to t...
The regeneration strategies of three Banksia species in relation to fire were studied over 20 years ...
Heathlands are scattered across fire-prone monsoonal northern Australia mostly in dissected sandston...
Eucalyptus delegatensis R.T. Baker subsp. delegatensis is an interval-sensitive, fire-killed eucalyp...
Members of the widespread arid Australian mulga (Acacia aneura) complex are fire-sensitive shrubs or...
We examine the patterns of germination response to fire in the fire-prone flora of the Sydney basin,...
Acacia suaveolens (Sm.) Willd is a perennial shrub that forms even-aged stands, recruited from a soi...
Seedlings of the native twining forbs Galactia tenuiflora and Pycnospora lutescens, the grass Hetero...
Abstract. The fire-prone sandstone Arnhem Plateau is recognised as an international centre of plant ...
Unseasonal fire occurrence is increasing globally, driven by climate change and other human activity...
Regular prescribed burning to manage the accumulation of flammable live and dead vegetation(fuel) is...
Intervals between fires are critical for the persistence of obligate-seeding shrubs, and are often u...
Plant reproductive phenology has evolved to enable species to persist within the constraints of the ...
This paper examines the effects of seedling size and age on fire tolerance of Allosyncarpia ternata ...
In arid Australia, fires in different seasons often result in markedly different recruitment rates o...
Anthropogenic modifications to climate and natural fire regimes are occurring globally, leading to t...
The regeneration strategies of three Banksia species in relation to fire were studied over 20 years ...
Heathlands are scattered across fire-prone monsoonal northern Australia mostly in dissected sandston...
Eucalyptus delegatensis R.T. Baker subsp. delegatensis is an interval-sensitive, fire-killed eucalyp...
Members of the widespread arid Australian mulga (Acacia aneura) complex are fire-sensitive shrubs or...
We examine the patterns of germination response to fire in the fire-prone flora of the Sydney basin,...
Acacia suaveolens (Sm.) Willd is a perennial shrub that forms even-aged stands, recruited from a soi...
Seedlings of the native twining forbs Galactia tenuiflora and Pycnospora lutescens, the grass Hetero...
Abstract. The fire-prone sandstone Arnhem Plateau is recognised as an international centre of plant ...
Unseasonal fire occurrence is increasing globally, driven by climate change and other human activity...