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Flooded Forest and Desert Creek
註釋The river red gum has the most widespread natural distribution of any Eucalyptus species; from Geraldton to Grafton, from the Yorke Peninsula to the Cape York Peninsula. As extensive forest and woodland, it forms the structural and functional elements of important floodplain and wetland ecosystems.

Yet we know remarkably little about the ecology and life history of this tree: its longevity; how deep its roots go; what proportion of its seedlings survive to adulthood; the diversity of organisms associated with it and the nature of those associations.

This tree has played a central role in the tension between economy, society and environment. Since the 1870s it has been the subject of repeated government enquiries over its conservation, use and management. We have now begun to move from a culture of wholesale exploitation of river red gum forests and woodlands to one of sustainable uses and conservation. The author traces this shift through the depiction of river red gums and inland floodplains in art, literature and the media.

KEY FEATURES

* Looks at the ecology and life history of the most widely distributed Eucalyptus species in Australia.

* An account of the importance of river red gum forests and woodlands as part of Country and Law for
Aboriginal people; the uses of the tree in the context of cultural history and traditional knowledge.

* Documentation of the threats and changes in river red gum landscapes and environment since European settlement.

* Richly illustrated with photographs, maps and color paintings.