Territory Stories

Investigation into dieback, Katherine River

Details:

Title

Investigation into dieback, Katherine River,

Creator

Trueman, M., Brocklehurst, P. S., Thompson, T., McLennan, A., Kahl, M., Northern Territory. Department of Land Resource Management,

Collection

E-Publications, E-Books, PublicationNT,

Date

2014-09-01,

Location

Katherine,

Description

Dieback is a phenomenon where trees prematurely die or decline in condition (Nadolny 2002). It often occurs at a stand-level, meaning that it occurs within a whole stand or part of a stand, rather than isolated trees (Mueller-Dombois 1988). It can occur rapidly or gradually, and can be caused by natural or anthropogenic agents (Nadolny 2002; Department for Environment and Heritage 2005). Dieback can pose a significant threat to native vegetation, especially if the causative agent is persistent and increasing in distribution, such as the root fungus Phytopthora cinnamomi that has had widespread and devastating impacts on Australian native species (Cahill et al. 2008).,

Notes

Made available via the Publications (Legal Deposit) Act 2004 (NT),

Language

English,

Subject

Dieback -- Northern Territory -- Katherine, Vegetation -- Northern Territory,

Publisher name

Northern Territory Government,

Place of publication

Palmerston,

Format

1 volume (various paging) : colour illustrations ; 29 cm.,

File type

application/pdf,

Use

Attribution International 4.0 (CC BY 4.0),

Copyright owner

Northern Territory Government,

License

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/,

Parent handle

https://hdl.handle.net/10070/256305,

Citation address

https://hdl.handle.net/10070/256305

Related items

https://hdl.handle.net/10070/521450,