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Turner Review Series
Australian Journal of Botany
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Volume 58 (2010) TURNER REVIEW No. 19. Savanna woody plant dynamics: the role of fire and herbivory, separately and synergistically Jeremy J. Midgley, Michael J. Lawes and Simon Chamaillé-Jammes pp. 1-11
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Volume 56 (2008) TURNER REVIEW No. 18. Greenhouse gas fluxes from natural ecosystems Ram C. Dalal and Diane E. Allen pp. 369-407
TURNER REVIEW No. 17. Phytophthora cinnamomi and Australia's biodiversity: impacts, predictions and progress towards control
TURNER REVIEW No. 16. Restoration demography and genetics of plants: when is a translocation successful?
TURNER REVIEW No. 15. 'Breathing' of the terrestrial biosphere: lessons learned from a global network of carbon dioxide flux measurement systems
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Volume 55 (2007) TURNER REVIEW No. 14. Roots of the Second Green Revolution Jonathan P. Lynch pp. 493-512
TURNER REVIEW No. 13. A framework to predict the effects of livestock grazing and grazing exclusion on conservation values in natural ecosystems in Australia
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Volume 54 (2006) TURNER REVIEW No. 12. It was no accident: deliberate plant introductions by Australian government agencies during the 20th century Garry D. Cook and Lesley Dias pp. 601-625
TURNER REVIEW No. 11. The ecology and evolution of gender strategies in plants: the example of Australian Wurmbea (Colchicaceae)
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Volume 53 (2005) TURNER REVIEW No. 10. Why do evergreen trees dominate the Australian seasonal tropics? D. M. J. S. Bowman and L. D. Prior pp. 379-399
TURNER REVIEW No. 9. Ecosystem services: an ecophysiological examination
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Volume 52 (2004) TURNER REVIEW No. 8. Ecology and ecophysiology of grasstrees Byron B. Lamont, Roy Wittkuhn and Dylan Korczynskyj pp. 561-582
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Volume 51 (2003) TURNER REVIEW No. 7. Impacts of ecosystem fragmentation on plant populations: generalising the idiosyncratic Richard J. Hobbs and Colin J. Yates pp. 471-488
TURNER REVIEW No. 6. Genetic pollution of native eucalypt gene pools—identifying the risks
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Volume 50 (2002) TURNER REVIEW No. 5. Are listed threatened plant species actually at risk? Mark A. Burgman pp. 1-13
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Volume 49 (2001) TURNER REVIEW No. 4. Co-occurrence of Proteaceae, laterite and related oligotrophic soils: coincidental associations or causative inter-relationships? J. S. Pate, W. H. Verboom and P. D. Galloway pp. 529-560
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Volume 48 (2000) TURNER REVIEW No. 3. Horticultural development of Australian native edible plants Amani K. Ahmed and Krystyna A. Johnson pp. 417-426
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Volume 47 (1999) TURNER REVIEW No. 2. Southern Conifers in Time and Space Tim J. Brodribb and Robert S. Hill pp. 639-696
TURNER REVIEW No. 1. The Process of Germination in Australian Species
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