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Rangelands, weeds and biodiversity
Author
Grice, A.C.
Martin, T.G.
Publisher
CSIRO
Publication Year
2006
Body

Australian rangelands are important for the diverse assemblages of native plants and animals that theyy
support as well as for the wide variety of products and services that they provide. These assemblages are of
national and international, cultural, social, ecological and economic significance. Woinarski (2001) identified several
processes that are threatening the biodiversity of Australian rangelands, including grazing pressure, the proliferation
of artificial watering points, vegetation clearing, predation by introduced animals and inappropriate fire regimes. His
review also highlighted the importance of invasion by non-native plant species, a threatening process for ecosystems
in other parts of Australia and around the world. Biological invasions pose a major risk for individual native species,
communities and the ecological processes upon which they depend. The papers in this Special Issue of The Rangeland
Journal consider non-native plant species in relation to the threats that they pose to the biodiversity of Australian
rangelands and how those threats may be managed.

Language
English
Resource Type
Text
Document Type
Journal Issue/Article
Journal Volume
28
Journal Pages
2-Jan
Collection
Rangelands West
Journal Name
The Rangeland Journal
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