Friday, June 27, 2008

SRES 3014 Vegetation Management

Pictures taken during the course's many interesting field trips and 'challenging' practicals. I should say, however, the level of awareness and general abilities gained through this course have certainly made the heavy workload and the long treks into woodlands, ravines, swamps, hills and rough terrain well worth it.


in a Group selection forest


Eucalyptus regnans seed capsules


Dorothy and Mel identifying tree species and measuring for tree dbh

senescence

Mr. X, wants biodiversity back in his property

Mr X's biodynamic farm estate, with trees acting as windbreaks, buffers, and land rehab agents

Mr. X's stagnating forest stand, what to do.

By John Field's (left) test plot in Mr. X's stand: figuring out the effects of thinning, fencing, burning and applying fertiliser on enhancing regeneration and biodiversity

A hollow-bearing/habitat tree in Mount Majura reserve

Friends of Mount Majura, helping record HBTs

Old Blotchy, tallest spotted gum in the world (part 1 of its 68 metres)

Part 2

Slash by a single selection forest on the South Coast


Briefing

into the stand

another Group selection site

tree felling giant

body slam

group selection ensures healthy and productive stand regeneration

Rosie randomly sampling for litter

open woodland

gnarly stems

Solene

it gets dark early

sheathing bark

on tube stocking


Brian from Greening Australia introduces direct seeding for tree plantings in agricultural landscapes

native vegetation nursery

Greening Australia trial site

tree corridor for farm and biodiversity benefits

Chris McElhinny (course lecturer) on the importance of preserving and nurturing remnant trees

No comments: