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A transect study of the Eucalyptus forests and woodlands of a dissected sandstone and laterite plateau near Darwin, Northern Territory
Author(s) -
KIRKPATRICK J. B.,
BOWMAN D. M. J. S.,
WILSON B. A.,
DICKINSON K. J. M.
Publication year - 1987
Publication title -
australian journal of ecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1442-9993
pISSN - 0307-692X
DOI - 10.1111/j.1442-9993.1987.tb00955.x
Subject(s) - transect , plateau (mathematics) , vegetation (pathology) , geology , geography , ecology , woodland , alligator , dominance (genetics) , understory , physical geography , paleontology , archaeology , biology , medicine , mathematical analysis , biochemistry , mathematics , pathology , canopy , gene , oceanography
Tabletop Mountain in the Northern Territory is a sandstone plateau topped in part by a residual laterite soil. The vegetation of the plateau was mapped and transects placed to cover the mapping units in which eucalypts were dominant or shared dominance. A polythetic divisive classification of the transect floristic data was largely congruent with the mapping units, which also differentiated the dominants. Topography and soils have an apparently strong influence on the nature of the vegetation through their influence on the periodicity and intensity of drought and Waterlogging. However, differences in soil fertility and understorey flammability are postulated to be important in discriminating several of the mapped vegetation types. The flora of Tabletop more closely resembles that of the Alligator Rivers region than that of the Mitchell Plateau or Weipa. Some of the communities differentiated at Tabletop are related floristically to some of the communities differentiated in the Alligator Rivers region and at Gove.