Eucalypt Ecology: Individuals to Ecosystems

Front Cover
Jann Elizabeth Williams, John Woinarski
Cambridge University Press, Nov 13, 1997 - Gardening - 430 pages
The dominant trees of Australia, eucalypts make up a remarkable genus. This authoritative volume provides current reviews by active researchers of many disciplines, including evolutionary history, genetics, distribution and modelling, the relationship of eucalypts to fire and nutrients, ecophysiology, pollination and reproductive ecology, interactions between eucalypts and other co-existing biota (including fungi, invertebrates and vertebrates), and conservation and management. Together these reviews shed light on the reasons for the great success of eucalypts in Australian environments, and provide a comprehensive summary for comparison with the ecology of major woody plant genera in other continents. This volume is of particular relevance to Australian ecologists, but also provides a stimulating perspective to students of vegetation ecology in all continents.
 

Contents

Phylogenetic history and classification of eucalypts
16
Reproductive biology of eucalypts
30
Eucalypt genetics and genecology
56
Evolutionary biogeography and contemporary distribution of eucalypts
92
Modelling environmental and temporal niches of eucalypts
129
interdependent or independent?
151
Eucalypt ecophysiology
168
Nutrient cycling in eucalypt ecosystems
197
Fungal diversity and ecology in eucalypt ecosystems
246
Invertebrates of eucalypt formations
278
Vertebrates of eucalypt formations
303
interactions between eucalypts and the vertebrates
342
Conservation and management of eucalypt ecosystems
373
overview and outlook
402
Taxonomic index
411
Subject index
427

Vascular planteucalypt interactions
227

Common terms and phrases

Bibliographic information