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Far South Ecology

Adventures of a plant nerd south of Australia

Far South Ecology

Adventures of a plant nerd south of Australia

Which winds have most influence on plants in windswept environments?

Posted onDecember 8, 2017December 9, 2017Leave a comment

You know a location is very windy when the trees and shrubs permanently lean in one direction. They might even be one-sided, with no foliage and scarred bark on the exposed side. Obviously, they will lean away from the strongest Read More …

CategoriesSubantarctic, TasmaniaTagsalpine, feldmark, Macquarie Island, Tasmania, wind

Tramping around the ‘big green sponge’

Posted onJune 28, 2017January 9, 2018Leave a comment

Forty-five degree slopes, putrid seal wallows and gale force winds – these are some of the challenges and hazards of getting around Macquarie Island. Several walking tracks provide access between field huts and key locations on the island. To go Read More …

CategoriesSubantarcticTagsfieldwork, Macquarie Island, revegetation

Penguin Day

Posted onApril 25, 2017April 25, 2017Leave a comment

World Penguin Day (25th April) seems like a good excuse to share some photos of one of Macquarie Island’s four resident penguin species, the king penguin (Aptenodytes patagonicus).   And a video of a typically inquisitive and slightly pugnacious posse Read More …

CategoriesSubantarcticTagsMacquarie Island, penguins

Return of the Megaherbs

Posted onMarch 31, 2017March 31, 2017Leave a comment

Four years have passed since I first visited Macquarie Island and now the subantarctic island looks like a different place. The distinctive tussock grass is dotted across the coastal slopes in a scene reminiscent of the 1980s and 1990s when Read More …

CategoriesSubantarcticTagsMacquarie Island, megaherbs, rabbits, rephotography, Subantarctic

Heading far south

Posted onMarch 14, 2017Leave a comment

The Aurora Australis is preparing to leave Hobart on a warm still autumn day. It looks like it will be a gentle cruise down the Derwent Estuary and across Storm Bay. We’re not expecting any bad weather for the first Read More …

CategoriesSubantarcticTagsAurora Australis

One year after Tasmania’s alpine wildfire

Posted onMarch 13, 2017May 13, 2017Leave a comment

In February 2017 I visited the charred landscape around Lake Mackenzie on Tasmania’s Central Plateau. Having seen many photographs of the devastation in the months after the bushfires of January 2016 I was curious to see the damage – and Read More …

CategoriesTasmaniaTagsalpine, Athrotaxis, bushfire, Central Plateau, conifers, fire ecology, subalpine, World Heritage

Rewilding Macquarie Island

Posted onDecember 21, 2016March 26, 2018Leave a comment

There is a long list of extinct animals which were endemic to a particular island. Island endemics are particularly vulnerable to introduced predators which can rapidly eliminate a small island population. Such was the fate of Macquarie Island’s only native Read More …

CategoriesSubantarcticTagsextinction, fauna, invasive species, Macquarie Island, rewilding, Subantarctic, threatened species

The last of Macquarie Island’s rabbits

Posted onNovember 8, 2016March 8, 20181 Comment

Five years ago this month, hunters on Macquarie Island killed six rabbits. The hunters had been patrolling the Subantarctic tundra for a little over three months in the search for feral rabbits. At the time nobody knew these were the Read More …

CategoriesSubantarcticTagsinvasive species, Macquarie Island, MIPEP, rabbits, Subantarctic

Do treelines in the Southern Hemisphere follow the rules?

Posted onOctober 25, 2016January 13, 2018Leave a comment

The southernmost treelines The treeline at the southern tip of South America, in Tierra del Fuego, reaches up to 600 m.a.s.l.  At the same latitude, Macquarie Island has no trees or shrubs. Is the lack of trees in the Subantarctic Read More …

CategoriesSubantarctic, TasmaniaTagsalpine, forest, Macquarie Island, Subantarctic, treeline

The limits to tree growth

Posted onSeptember 30, 2016October 25, 2016Leave a comment

What is the treeline? If you go high enough up a tall mountain there is a point where trees disappear and you transition into low alpine vegetation. The same holds if you travel toward the North Pole, where the boreal Read More …

CategoriesUncategorisedTagsalpine, forest, subalpine, treeline, trees

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