Acacias in Queensland

Acacias in Queensland
Author: L. Pedley
Publisher:
Total Pages: 280
Release: 1987
Genre: Science
ISBN:

Botanical descriptions of Acacia spp. in Queensland, with keys for identification. Included is an index of collections of Acacia in the Queensland Herbarium arranged according to collector. .

Edible Wattle Seeds of Southern Australia

Edible Wattle Seeds of Southern Australia
Author: BR Maslin
Publisher: CSIRO PUBLISHING
Total Pages: 108
Release: 1998-01-01
Genre: Science
ISBN: 0643102531

This book identifies 47 Acacia species which have potential for cultivation in the southern semi-arid region of Australia as a source of seed for human consumption. Eighteen species are regarded as having the greatest potential. Botanical profiles are provided for these species, together with information on the natural distribution, ecology, phenology, growth characteristics and seed attributes. Two species, Acacia victoriae and Acacia murrayana, appear particularly promising as the seeds of both these have good nutritional characteristics and were commonly used as food by Aborigines. Acacia victoriae is currently the most important wattle used in the Australian bushfood industry. This book is a useful reference for the bush food industry.

Flora of Australia

Flora of Australia
Author: A. E. Orchard
Publisher: CSIRO
Total Pages: 714
Release: 2001
Genre: Science
ISBN: 9780643067172

The information in the Flora of Australia online website was first published in the Flora of Australia series.

Diseases of Tropical Acacias: Proceedings of an International Workshop Held at Subanjeriji (South Sumatra), 28 April-3 May 1996

Diseases of Tropical Acacias: Proceedings of an International Workshop Held at Subanjeriji (South Sumatra), 28 April-3 May 1996
Author: Kenneth Malcolm Old
Publisher: CIFOR
Total Pages: 127
Release: 1997-01-01
Genre: Acacia
ISBN: 9798764137

Acacias are of considerable social and industrial importance for tropical reforestation and it is expected that about 2 million hectares will be established in Southeast Asia by the year 2000. The acacia species currently of most interest for plantation forestry in the tropics are indigenous to northern Australia, Papua New Guinea and Irian Jaya. Recent reports from Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand and northern Australia suggest that the future productivity of acacia plantations may be affected by fungal pathogens including leaf spots, shoot blights, stem cankers, heart rot, root rots and gall rusts. During 1995-96 a series of disease surveys was undertaken by forest pathologists in native stands, trials, and operational and social forestry plantings of tropical acacias in Australia, India, Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand to assess the potential of fungal pathogens as limiting factors to tree growth and productivity and to assess the relative importance of individual fungal pathogens. Tree species included in the surveys were Acacia mangium and A. auriculiformis, on the basis of their current importance as plantation species. A. crassicarpa and A. aulacocarpa were also surveyed as, although they have been planted on a limited scale so far, they are included in provenance and species trials in many locations throughout the region. Scientists who had participated in the project met with research managers of five major Indonesian plantation pulp and paper companies and government business enterprises from 28 April – 3 May 1996 at the base camp of PT Musi Hutan Persada Subanjeriji in southern Sumatra, to present the results of their surveys. This publication is a status report on the diseases of acacias in the several countries based on information presented at the workshop. It provides a benchmark of the current knowledge of the pathology of the four most important Acacia species currently being grown in plantations in tropical areas of Southeast Asia, the Indian subcontinent and northern Australia.

Flora of Australia

Flora of Australia
Author:
Publisher: CSIRO PUBLISHING
Total Pages: 564
Release: 2001
Genre: Science
ISBN: 9780643067196

The information in the Flora of Australia online website was first published in the Flora of Australia series.

Handbook of Flowering

Handbook of Flowering
Author: Abraham H. Halevy
Publisher: CRC Press
Total Pages: 770
Release: 2019-07-23
Genre: Science
ISBN: 1351081039

These volumes are an exhaustive source of information on the control and regulation of flowering. They present data on the factors controlling flower induction and how they may be affected by climate and chemical treatments. For each plant, specific information is provided on all aspects of flower development, including sex expression, requirements for flowering initiation and development, photoperiod, light density, vernalization, and other temperature effects and interactions. Individual species are described from the standpoint of juvenility and maturation, morphology, induction and morphogenesis to anthesis. All information is presented alphabetically for easy reference