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Response of acacia species to soil disturbance by roadworks in southern New South Wales, Australia
Peter Spooner, The Johnstone Centre, Charles Sturt University
Spooner P. 2006. Response of acacia species to soil disturbance by roadworks in southern New South Wales, Australia. IN: Proceedings of the 2005 International Conference on Ecology and Transportation, Eds. Irwin CL, Garrett P, McDermott KP. Center for Transportation and the Environment, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC: pp. 260-267.
ABSTRACT: Heavy machinery is regularly used throughout the world to maintain infrastructure corridors. The purpose
of this study is to investigate the response of roadside populations of three Acacia shrub species to soil disturbance
from roadworks. Results were highly variable. However, resprouting and seedling emergence led to a 6.2 percent
population increase at four road reserves. Two years after grading, there was significant resprouting of A. decora and
resprouts reached a mean height of 72 cm. One year after disturbance, 71 percent of A. decora resprouts flowered and
49 percent also set viable seed. In contrast, there was patchy seedling emergence of A. pycnantha and A. montana.
These results show that grading of roadsides appears to favor plants with strong resprouting ability and that the scale
of response depends on the plants life-history attributes and the prevailing disturbance regime. Further studies of
individual plant responses to soil disturbance can only better our understanding of plant dynamics in road and other
transportation corridors.
CITATION: Spooner P. 2006. Response of acacia species to soil disturbance by roadworks in southern New South Wales, Australia. IN: Proceedings of the 2005 International Conference on Ecology and Transportation, Eds. Irwin CL, Garrett P, McDermott KP. Center for Transportation and the Environment, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC: pp. 260-267.
Road Ecology Center.
Paper Spooner2005a.
http://repositories.cdlib.org/jmie/roadeco/Spooner2005a
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