Abstract
Timing of shoot expansion, flowering, germination and leaf fall was recorded. Most variation in phenology and germination requirements was continuous and correlated broadly with distribution with respect to the temperature climate. The species which commonly occur at high altitudes (Athrotaxis selaginoides, A. cupressoides, Nothofagus gunnii and N. cunninghamii) germinated earlier at low temperatures than the others, with provenance variation indicated in N. cunninghamii. The cold-sensitive species Atherosperma moschatum failed to germinate at low temperatures, with a secondary dormancy indicated Atherosperma moschatum and Phyllocladus aspleniifolius showed delayed shoot expansion during the cool growing season of 1984-85 which rendered the shoots more frost-sensitive. The periodicity of seed production is also greatest in the high altitude species. Only P. aspleniifolius shows evidence of prolonged seed dormancy, enabling populations to survive large-scale disturbance as soil-stored seed. -from Author
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Read, J. (1989). Phenology and germination in some rainforest canopy species at Mt Field National Park, Tasmania. Papers & Proceedings - Royal Society of Tasmania, 123, 211–221. https://doi.org/10.26749/rstpp.123.211
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