Woodland rehabilitation and biodiversity conservation in an agricultural landscape in south Eastern Australia

Date

2017

Authors

Adams-Schimminger, Miriam
Fifield, Graham
Doran, Bruce
Freudenberger, David

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

University of California Press

Abstract

Southern Australia has a tree crisis. The iconic and ecologically essential eucalypt trees are dying out across vast swathes of farmland that were once grassy woodlands. A century of clearing and agricultural intensification, plus the failure of these trees to self-regenerate, has led to a massive loss of wildlife habitat, particularly tree hollows that only form in large and old Eucalyptus trees. Just as importantly, this decline in trees has exposed farmers to losses of agricultural productivity. There is now a lack of shelter for livestock. Rising salty ground water is degrading pastures as this ground water is no longer being controlled by the deep roots and respiration of eucalypts. We describe the research that shows how an innovative partnership between farmers, a non-government environmental organisation, and government funding is rehabilitating entire fields to a productive and wildlife-rich woodland full of thriving eucalypts.

Description

Keywords

Citation

Source

Case Studies in the Environment

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

Open Access

License Rights

Restricted until