2021
DOI: 10.1007/s10980-020-01176-5
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Resilience of trees and the vulnerability of grasslands to climate change in temperate Australian wetlands

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Cited by 11 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…There have been major changes in flow and flood regimes to most major wetlands in the Basin (Sims et al 2012). These changes have had direct adverse effects on ecological character due to declines in the condition and extent of vegetation communities (Bowen and Simpson 2010;Saintilan et al 2021), reductions in the abundance and breeding frequency of waterbirds (Kingsford et al 2017), the health of floodplain trees (Mac Nally et al 2011) and increased damage due to invasive species (Stuart et al 2021). Despite these negative impacts, there have only been two notifications of change in ecological character provided by the Commonwealth Government to the Ramsar Secretariat under Article 3.2 of the Ramsar Convention since Australia became a contracting party in December 1975 (Table 1).…”
Section: Changes In Ecological Character and Continuing Threatsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There have been major changes in flow and flood regimes to most major wetlands in the Basin (Sims et al 2012). These changes have had direct adverse effects on ecological character due to declines in the condition and extent of vegetation communities (Bowen and Simpson 2010;Saintilan et al 2021), reductions in the abundance and breeding frequency of waterbirds (Kingsford et al 2017), the health of floodplain trees (Mac Nally et al 2011) and increased damage due to invasive species (Stuart et al 2021). Despite these negative impacts, there have only been two notifications of change in ecological character provided by the Commonwealth Government to the Ramsar Secretariat under Article 3.2 of the Ramsar Convention since Australia became a contracting party in December 1975 (Table 1).…”
Section: Changes In Ecological Character and Continuing Threatsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Long-term mapping of some of the most extensive E. camaldulensis forests (the Barmah-Millewa Forest and the Macquarie Marshes) using historical aerial photography suggests a substantial increase in extent at the expense of wetland grassland communities over recent decades. For example, in the Barmah-Millewa Forest (35850 0 S, 145800 0 E), the largest stand of E. camaldulensis in Australia, forest extent has expanded since the 1940s (Bren 1992;Colloff et al 2014;Saintilan et al 2021), primarily into areas previously occupied by flood-dependent Moira grass Pseudoraphis spinescens. Under natural recruitment regimes, E. camaldulensis stands in the forest were at higher densities and higher canopy cover following the Millennium Drought compared with the historical, pre-logging era in the previous century (McGregor et al 2016).…”
Section: Observations Of Forested Wetland Resilience and Expansionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Under natural recruitment regimes, E. camaldulensis stands in the forest were at higher densities and higher canopy cover following the Millennium Drought compared with the historical, pre-logging era in the previous century (McGregor et al 2016). In the Macquarie Marshes (30843 0 S, 147832 0 E), E. camaldulensis forest extent increased between 1991 and 2013 (Bino et al 2015;Bowen et al 2017;Saintilan et al 2021). Although mortality has been reported during and after the Millennium Drought (Catelotti et al 2015), dead trees were clustered primarily in areas that were already identified as stressed (Table 1) during a benchmark survey in 1993 (Bacon 1996).…”
Section: Observations Of Forested Wetland Resilience and Expansionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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