Seed propagation of two native Australian species important for land restoration©

Author(s)
Talonia, L F R
Reid, N C H
Smith, R
Publication Date
2016
Abstract
<p>There has been substantial investment in revegetation and restoration of native biodiversity in eastern Australia in recent decades (Close and Davidson, 2003). Incentive programs run through agencies such as Catchment Management Authorities encourage community-based management of natural resources and restoration of native vegetation communities to support biodiversity conservation (Hallett et al., 2014; Local Land Services, 2014). However, more effort is required to achieve restoration at landscape scales. The main limitations to landscape-scale restoration are associated with costs, incompatibility with existing agricultural practices, deficiency of straight financial profits from restoration activities, and inappropriate incentives to change the land management practices (Morrison et al., 2008).</p>
Citation
Acta Horticulturae, v.1140, p. 89-94
ISBN
9789462611252
ISSN
2406-6168
0567-7572
Link
Language
en
Publisher
International Society for Horticultural Science (ISHS)
Title
Seed propagation of two native Australian species important for land restoration©
Type of document
Conference Publication
Entity Type
Publication

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