Science
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- 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
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- She-oaks - tough survivors
- Soilborne plant diseases in Vietnam
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She-oaks - tough survivorsKaren Wilson, Botanist My research with Dr Lawrie Johnson (1925-1997), former Director of the Royal Botanic Gardens, has led to new views on relationships in the She-oak family, Casuarinaceae. There are 96 species, grouped in four genera. Studying differences in appearance, DNA, insect predators, and the bacteria that live in their roots, helps us understand the species - in the past as well as the present - and predict their future survival. The Swamp-oaks, Casuarina glauca, in the Royal Botanic Gardens, are part of the original shoreline vegetation of Farm Cove. They are all growing from the one rootstock. Did you know?
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