Provenance is a great word to add fat to the fire I reckon
Moderator: Bluetongue

boylesg wrote:roughbarked wrote:Thousands of times I have caused Eucalypts to come up like a lawn. Literally thousands
You probably have never walked in the bush after rain .. if you can say it does not occur.
The question is how many of those seedlings survive the natural biological controls to maturity to form a dense thicket.
With a Gorse seedling lawn the majority of seedlings survive to maturity and the lawn becomes an impenetrable thicket, such that it is physically impossible to walk among them.
Even under the best conditions with a high Eucalypt seedling survival rate, such as at Bundoora Park on Plenty Road with its River Red Gums, it is still a very easy matter to walk among the resulting Eucalypt saplings. And even here it is unlikely that all the current sapplings will survive long term. After all there are no River Red Gum jungles any where our continent.

roughbarked wrote:boylesg wrote:roughbarked wrote:Thousands of times I have caused Eucalypts to come up like a lawn. Literally thousands
You probably have never walked in the bush after rain .. if you can say it does not occur.
The question is how many of those seedlings survive the natural biological controls to maturity to form a dense thicket.
With a Gorse seedling lawn the majority of seedlings survive to maturity and the lawn becomes an impenetrable thicket, such that it is physically impossible to walk among them.
Even under the best conditions with a high Eucalypt seedling survival rate, such as at Bundoora Park on Plenty Road with its River Red Gums, it is still a very easy matter to walk among the resulting Eucalypt saplings. And even here it is unlikely that all the current sapplings will survive long term. After all there are no River Red Gum jungles any where our continent.
I have been quoted as saying.. "they come up like grass after rain but many are dead on the first hot day.. By the end of the first year unless it continues to rain regularly(it sometimes happens), more than 60% will be dead. By the end of the second year.. halve that again or more.."
Yes I agree that Australia is a tough place for plants. However they do try..
roughbarked wrote:only ominous if there is not something done to stop them.
The Eucalyptus globulus that was grown in Kew gardens way back when they first found Eucalyptus globulus.. broke all the records by reaching 125 feet in five years.
roughbarked wrote:Yep Eucalypts in California and Melaleuca in the Everglades
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