Science
- Research
- Australian 'Bush Potato'
- Australian freshwater algae
- Australian fungi
- Biology of Myrtaceae
- Botany of Botany Bay
- Cotton Wilt
- Cycas - ancient survivors
- DNA of ground orchids
- DNA studies of Elaeocarpaceae
- DNA studies of Restionaceae
- Ecology of Cumberland Plain Woodland
- Evolution and conservation
- Evolution of Cyperaceae
- Evolution of Proteaceae
- Evolution of Vallisneria
- Floristic Lists of NSW
- Fungal leaf spot on eucalypts
- Fusarium wilt
- Habitat fragmentation
- Lepidoziaceae - southern liverworts
- Marine algae
- NSW Seedbank
- NSW Vegetation Classification & Assessment Project
- Phythophthora in national parks
- Plants, vegetation, landscape, country
- Seed biology
- Seeds for the Future
- She-oaks - tough survivors
- Soilborne plant diseases in Vietnam
- Terrestrial orchids
- Trees of Papua New Guinea
- Wollemi Pine
- NSW Herbarium
- Science staff
- Our resources
- Scientific publications
Woodland at Mount Annan Botanic GardenPrior to the establishment of Mount Annan Botanic Garden in 1988, the land was part of rural holdings taken up by settlers in the early 1800s. Past land management has been patchy, and areas have been variously cleared or partly cleared, cultivated and pasture-improved, and grazed by domestic and feral animals. Farming and grazing stopped in the years leading up to 1988. The Cumberland Plain Woodland remnants at Mount Annan appear to have been the least-disturbed areas, and since 1988 Botanic Gardens Trust scientists have been studying the ecology and monitoring change in the remnant vegetation. Results from their work and its implications for management are provided here. The Conservation Research Woodland at Mount Annan and the vegetation monitoring programSince 1988 we have been monitoring changes in remnant vegetation, in one remnant in particular, the Research Woodland, set aside for conservation in 1988 and containing about 10 ha of Cumberland Plain Woodland vegetation. The Research Woodland was one of the first conservation areas to be designated, as it appeared to have the best remnant native bush (including a local population of the listed rare plant, Pimelea spicata), but like other parts of Mount Annan the site has a past history of partial clearing, grazing by domestic stock, and some localised cultivation and pasture improvement. The Research Woodland is immediately north of the Mount Annan Botanic Garden entrance gates and is accessible from Cunningham Drive.
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