Two Hundred Years of Land Use and Vegetation Change in a Remnant Coastal Woodland in Southern Australia
Ian D. Lunt
Abstract
Post-settlement changes in vegetation and land use were examined in a
reputedly undisturbed woodland remnant at Ocean Grove, southern Victoria, the
site of earlier ecological studies. The vegetation has passed through at least
three structural phases since European colonisation: an open grassy woodland
dominated by Allocasuarina and
Eucalyptus species and
Banksia marginata Cav. with few shrubs; an open scrub of
Acacia pycnantha Benth.; and a closed scrub of
Allocasuarina littoralis (Salisb.) L.A.S.Johnson, which
now dominates the reserve. Tree and shrub density has progressively increased,
from perhaps less than 20 trees ha–1 in the early
1800s, to over 3000 trees ha–1 in 1996. Most large
Allocasuarina trees established in the late 1930s or
early 1940s, and Allocasuarina littoralis appears to
have invaded rapidly thereafter. Surprisingly,
A. littoralis was not recorded in an 1894 plant census,
and might have been locally rare last century. Vegetation changes over the
past 200 years can be attributed to the long-term absence of fire. The
abundant recruitment of Acacia species in the mid- to
late-1800s may have been a rapid response to the curtailment of Aboriginal
burning, and the more recent invasion of A. littoralis a
longer-term response to fire exclusion. The importance of active vegetation
management for biodiversity conservation in the future is stressed.
Australian Journal of Botany 46(6) 629 - 647 (1998) doi:10.1071/BT97052





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