Expert allocation of primary growth form to the New South Wales flora underpins the biodiversity assessment method
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Authors
Oliver, Ian
McNellie, Megan J.
Steenbeeke, Greg
Copeland, Lachlan
Porteners, Marianne F.
Wall, Julian
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Volume Title
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Environment Institute of Australia and New Zealand
Abstract
Biodiversity values under the New South Wales (NSW) Biodiversity Conservation Act 2016 are assessed in part according to the number and cover of native plant species within each of six growth form groups (trees, shrubs, grasses and grass-like, forbs, ferns, and others). Here we revise 19 growth form descriptions and use an independent expert process to allocate the most common (primary) growth form to the native terrestrial vascular
plant flora of NSW. Independent allocations made by three
botanists concurred for 6,153 taxa (84.7 per cent of the flora) and the remaining 1,112 taxa were resolved via a structured consensus making process. Allocation of each taxon to primary growth form has generated a single point of reference for the most common growth form for each native vascular plant species, expressed in its mature state across the extent of its range in NSW. The work presented here was undertaken to support transparent, repeatable and rigorous assessments of the richness and cover of
growth form groups for the NSW Biodiversity Assessment Method. However, our approach and findings will be relevant to any government agency, industry group or researcher that uses plant growth forms to simplify ecological complexity or to assess the site-scale biodiversity values of terrestrial vegetation.
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Australasian Journal of Environmental Management
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Book Title
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Open Access
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Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs License