Little is known of the interactive effects of fire and grazing on cryptogam species and assemblages. These effects were observed for bryophyte and lichen species in Tasmanian tussock grassland and hummock sedgeland several months after experimental burning and fencing. A factorial design was used on 40 randomly located and treated pairs of 1m1m quadrats in each of the vegetation types. In total, 24 cryptogam taxa were found, with grassland having a greater taxon richness, as well as higher total cryptogam cover and a different species composition, to the hummock sedgeland. There was greater cryptogam cover in the burned quadrats than the unburned quadrats in the grassland. However, only bryophytes had different species composition bet...
The relative impacts of clearfelling followed by slash-burning, clearfelling, and no treatment were ...
Fire prone coastal heathlands are widespread, and range from naturally fire prone Mediterranean-type...
The montane area of the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area was recently burnt by large fires i...
Little is known of the interactive effects of fire and grazing on cryptogam species and assemblages....
Background and aims – The use of fire as a managing tool influences and maintains many types of vege...
The aim of this study was to determine bryophyte richness and species composition in Tasmanian butto...
The vascular species composition of volcanic plains grassland remnants of western Victoria is strong...
Fire appears to be a rare event in alpine vegetation, suggesting that its effects might be more pers...
1. Natural area managers use fire and grazing to achieve nature conservation⁄production goals and t...
1. The importance of peatlands is being increasingly recognized internationally for both the conserv...
The temperate Eucalyptus savannas in the Midlands of Tasmania are ancient ecosystems where fire and ...
Grazers and fire have been characterised as 'competing' consumers of vegetation biomass. Few studies...
Observations were made across 11-40-year-old fire boundaries in Tasmanian alpine areas of varying ma...
An important conservation question for grazed areas of lowland subhumid Tasmania is ‘what effects d...
The relative impacts of clearfelling followed by slash-burning, clearfelling, and no treatment were ...
Fire prone coastal heathlands are widespread, and range from naturally fire prone Mediterranean-type...
The montane area of the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area was recently burnt by large fires i...
Little is known of the interactive effects of fire and grazing on cryptogam species and assemblages....
Background and aims – The use of fire as a managing tool influences and maintains many types of vege...
The aim of this study was to determine bryophyte richness and species composition in Tasmanian butto...
The vascular species composition of volcanic plains grassland remnants of western Victoria is strong...
Fire appears to be a rare event in alpine vegetation, suggesting that its effects might be more pers...
1. Natural area managers use fire and grazing to achieve nature conservation⁄production goals and t...
1. The importance of peatlands is being increasingly recognized internationally for both the conserv...
The temperate Eucalyptus savannas in the Midlands of Tasmania are ancient ecosystems where fire and ...
Grazers and fire have been characterised as 'competing' consumers of vegetation biomass. Few studies...
Observations were made across 11-40-year-old fire boundaries in Tasmanian alpine areas of varying ma...
An important conservation question for grazed areas of lowland subhumid Tasmania is ‘what effects d...
The relative impacts of clearfelling followed by slash-burning, clearfelling, and no treatment were ...
Fire prone coastal heathlands are widespread, and range from naturally fire prone Mediterranean-type...
The montane area of the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area was recently burnt by large fires i...