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Far South Ecology

Adventures of a plant nerd south of Australia

Tag: biogeography

A one-way ticket to a remote island

Posted onMay 8, 2015January 13, 20182 Comments

Where did Macquarie Island’s plants come from? Being hundreds of kilometres from its nearest neighbours, all of the plants must have been transported to this tiny speck of land in the ocean since it rose from the seabed less than Read More …

CategoriesSubantarcticTagsbiogeography, dispersal, Macquarie Island, Subantarctic

The Subantarctic – where 43 plant species is a lot

Posted onMarch 26, 2015August 6, 2016Leave a comment

Macquarie Island’s total of 43 native vascular plant species is low by most standards – some Tasmanian National Parks of similar size have more than ten times this diversity.* But amongst the Subantarctic islands, none come close to Macca’s species Read More …

CategoriesSubantarcticTagsbiogeography, flora, Macquarie Island, Subantarctic

Land of the megaherbs

Posted onMarch 20, 2015August 6, 2016Leave a comment

There are no trees. No shrubs even. The tallest plants are  ‘megaherbs’, which can just reach over head height. This is the unusual assemblage of plants which inhabit Macquarie Island. In contrast to the Northern Hemisphere tundra where low-growing shrubs Read More …

CategoriesSubantarcticTagsbiogeography, flora, Macquarie Island, Subantarctic

AAD alpine Athrotaxis Aurora Australis biogeography bushfire Central Plateau conifers dispersal extinction fauna feldmark field work fieldwork fire ecology flora forest invasive species Macquarie Island megaherbs MIPEP penguins rabbits rephotography revegetation rewilding subalpine Subantarctic Tasmania threatened species treeline trees wind World Heritage

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