Territory Stories

A field guide to plants of Darwin Sansheet Heath

Details:

Title

A field guide to plants of Darwin Sansheet Heath,

Creator

Liddle, David T, Cowie, Ian D, Hirst, Sarah R, Stuckey, Ben M, Top End Native Plant Society,

Sponsored by

Northern Territory. Department of Environment and Natural Resources. Northern Territory Herbarium,

Collection

E-Publications, E-Books, PublicationNT, Project NTRM00420,

Date

2017-08,

Location

Darwin Region, Howard River, Adelaide River,

Abstract

The content of this guide is focused on species that occur on Darwin Sandsheet Heath and includes all the plants commonly encountered therein. Plants are arranged in four parts based upon lifeform: herbs, sedges, grasses and trees and shrubs. Sandsheet heath is a rare vegetation type present in the Darwin Region, covering approximately 56 square kilometres.,

Notes

On cover: A collaborative project funded by: Territory Natural Resource Management, Australian Government National Landcare Programme. At head of title: Northern Territory Government, Top End Native Plant Society., Made available via the Publications (Legal Deposit) Act 2004 (NT).,

Table of contents

Acknowledgements -- How to use this guide -- What is Darwin Sandsheet Heath -- How the species list was compiled -- Please provide feedback for future versions -- Glossary -- References,

Language

English,

Subject

Vegetation, Flora, Plants, Heath,

Publisher name

Top End Native Plant Society in collaboration with Northern Territory Herbarium,

Place of publication

Palmerston,

Series

Project NTRM00420,

Format

[87] pages : chiefly colour illustrations,

File type

application/pdf,

Use

Copyright,

Copyright owner

Top End Native Plant Society and Northern Territory Government,

License

https://www.legislation.gov.au/Details/C2021C00407,

Related links

http://www.topendnativeplants.org.au [Top End Native Plants Website],

Parent handle

https://hdl.handle.net/10070/269701,

Citation address

https://hdl.handle.net/10070/269701

Related items

https://hdl.handle.net/10070/435538,