• Title of article

    The extent and pattern of Eucalyptus regeneration in an agricultural landscape

  • Author/Authors

    Weinberg، نويسنده , , Anthony and Gibbons، نويسنده , , Philip and Briggs، نويسنده , , Sue V. and Bonser، نويسنده , , Stephen P.، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
  • Pages
    7
  • From page
    227
  • To page
    233
  • Abstract
    The process of natural regeneration is critical for sustaining remnant native vegetation and the ecosystem services it supports. We quantified the extent and pattern of Eucalyptus regeneration within remnant vegetation in a fragmented agricultural landscape in south-eastern Australia. Eucalyptus regeneration was absent at 42% of sites. Using an information-theoretic approach, we explored 13 possible models of Eucalyptus regeneration across multiple scales. The explanatory variables in the four models with empirical support (and their summed Akaike weights) were: grazing intensity (1.0), native ground cover (0.99), remnant area (0.83), tenure (0.67), canopy cover (0.21) and vegetation type (0.11). Averaging across these four models we predicted that the probability of Eucalyptus regeneration was highest (0.95) in relatively unmodified remnant native vegetation, that is, remnant vegetation on public land where grazing was light and the understorey was dominated by native plants. In contrast, the predicted probability of Eucalyptus regeneration was lowest (0.12) in small remnants on private land where grazing was heavy. Our results suggest that a large proportion of all remnant native vegetation in this landscape will disappear under existing land management and farming practices. Reducing grazing pressure within intensively grazed remnants appears to be the single most effective management intervention that will mitigate this threat. This will require a shift in conservation priorities away from large, intact remnants where regeneration does not appear to be affected, to poorer quality remnants—often small remnants or scattered trees—where regeneration is typically absent.
  • Keywords
    Threat , Prioritisation , Box gum grassy woodland , Australia , Scattered trees , Agri-environmental , Paddock trees , Grazing
  • Journal title
    Biological Conservation
  • Serial Year
    2011
  • Journal title
    Biological Conservation
  • Record number

    1909369