The importance of Travelling Stock Reserves for maintaining high-quality threatened temperate woodlands
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Authors
O'Loughlin, Thea
O'Loughlin, Luke S.
Michael, Damian R.
Wood, Jeffrey T.
Waudby, Helen P.
Falcke, Phillip
Lindenmayer, David B
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CSIRO Publishing
Abstract
Travelling Stock Reserves are thought to represent some of the highest-quality and least degraded remnants of threatened temperate woodland in south-eastern Australia. These public reserves have not had the same high levels of grazing pressure and other disturbances as woodland remnants on private land. Thus, Travelling Stock Reserves are expected to be important for the protection of biodiversity in heavily cleared and modified landscapes. We tested the hypothesis that land tenure had significant effects on the quality of woodlands by comparing vegetation structural attributes between Travelling Stock Reserves and remnant vegetation used for primary production purposes. Vegetation attributes were monitored in 155 permanent plots over five years in remnant temperate woodland sites in the Riverina bioregion of New South Wales. Overall, Travelling Stock Reserves supported higher native plant species richness and were characterized by higher ground cover of native shrubs and less cover of exotic plant species when compared to agricultural production areas. We found land tenure had significant effects on some vegetation attributes demonstrated to be important for threatened fauna. We attribute these results to Travelling Stock Reserves having a history of lower grazing pressure compared to remnants managed for agricultural production. Our study provides empirical evidence to support the high conservation value of Travelling Stock Reserves in formerly woodland-dominated, but now extensively cleared, agricultural landscapes.
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Citation
O’Loughlin, T., O’Loughlin, L.S., Michael, D.R., Wood, J.T., Waudby, H.P., Falcke, P. and Lindenmayer, D.B. (2017). The importance of travelling stock reserves for maintaining high-quality threatened temperate woodlands. Australian Journal of Botany, 65, 507-516.
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Australian Journal of Botany
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Open Access
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Author/s Accepted Manuscript (AAM) / Post-print