Survival strategies of 34 species of lichens from a range of substrata, climates and growth forms were examined using the triangular ordination procedure of Grime. Triangular ordination is apparently an appropriate technique to apply to lichens, all available data falling within a triangle except for two foliicolous species which are probably partial leaf parasites. Statistically significant relationships between survival strategy and growth form, mode of asexual reproduction, substratum preference, family affiliation, and diversity of secondary chemical biosynthetic pathways have been demonstrated.
The germinable soil seed bank of a grassy Eucalyptus populnea F.Muell, open woodland was investigated in relationship to distance from water (away from a bore-drain) on North Yancho Station, near Bollon in southern semi-arid Queensland. The germinable soil seed bank was both diverse and abundant, 69 taxa of seedlings being identified to species and 2 more to genus. A mean density of 13 207 ± 4160 seeds m-2 was recorded, with over 80% of the seed being from the annual forbs Crassula sieberana (Schultes & J.H.Shultes) Druce, Wahlenbergia tumidifructa P.J.Smith and Dysphania gomulifera (Nees) Paul G.Wilson. Most common species showed spatial variation in their germinable seed density with relation to distance from water, resembling the patterns previously reported by other authors for standing vegetation under stocking pressure gradients.
The plant components and chemical composition of litter fall and the litter layer in a forest growing
on deep, nutrient-poor sands were examined on North Stradbroke Island, south-eastern Queensland.
The seasonal distribution of litter fall was examined over a 26-month period. While the total litter
fall was greatest during summer months, the dominant tree species differed in their individual
patterns of litter fall. Eucalyptus signata showed a single summer peak for leaf fall while E. umbra
exhibited one peak in early summer and another in autumn. The possibility is discussed that these
and other temporal differences are evolutionary expressions of niche differentiatibn to reduce
competition between species in the ecosystem. The total litter fall averaged 640 g m-1 yr-1 and
the accumulated forest floor mass totalled 2700 g m-2.
Total nutrient pools and nutrient inputs in litter fall are presented. A litter half-life of 2.9 years
is estimated, a figure close to the half-life of most of the nutrients in the litter. Manganese appears
to be markedly concentrated in eucalypt leaves before they fall. Only sodium, potassium, copper and
chloride appear to be leached easily from leaves slashed from trees and left on the forest floor.
Patterns of litter production and decay in this subtropical forest fit within trends extrapolated from
temperate Eucalyptus-dominated communities studied to date.
The plant biomass of a Eucalyptus signata-dominated forest 15 m tall growing on infertile sands off
the Queensland coast is characterized in detail. The forest has a biomass of 180 t/ha, 90% of which
is found in the nine species achieving > 2.5 m height. Of the total biomass, 42.5 % is below ground.
Pteridium esculentum occupies 41 % of the understorey biomass, with 50 shrub and herb species
partitioning the remainder. Dimension analysis of 10-11 individuals of each of three tree species-
Eucalyptus signata, E. umbra subsp. umbra and Banksia aemula-has served to characterize the
above- and below-ground growth forms of each species, and provide regressions of the mass of tree
components on easily measured plant parts. The size distribution of tree and shrub stems on the
site suggests that the major species have evolved quite different reproductive strategies for main-
taining a steady-state population in the face of recurrent fires.
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