Vegetation of the Wessel and English Company Islands, north-eastern ArnhemLand, northern territory, Australia

Citation
Jcz. Woinarski et al., Vegetation of the Wessel and English Company Islands, north-eastern ArnhemLand, northern territory, Australia, AUST J BOT, 48(1), 2000, pp. 115-141
Citations number
54
Categorie Soggetti
Plant Sciences
Journal title
AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY
ISSN journal
00671924 → ACNP
Volume
48
Issue
1
Year of publication
2000
Pages
115 - 141
Database
ISI
SICI code
0067-1924(2000)48:1<115:VOTWAE>2.0.ZU;2-0
Abstract
Vegetation patterning is described for two neighbouring continental island chains off Arnhem Land, Australia. A total of 684 species was recorded from 57 islands, with reasonably comprehensive lists for 36 of these islands. A lmost 90% of the deviance in plant species richness was associated with isl and size. The richness of plants dispersed by sea and/or vertebrates was pr oportionally greater on small islands; that of relatively poor dispersers w as greater on larger islands. Twelve vegetation communities were defined by classification of plant species composition in 226 50 x 50-m quadrats. The re was no relationship between island size and species richness at the quad rat level, at least for the most extensive vegetation types. The vegetation of the islands is now composed of two main elements an original set of com munities (mostly of heath, tussock grassland and eucalypt open forest) whos e species have poor inter-island dispersal, and a set of more recent coloni sts (mostly of strand, mangrove and coastal thicket communities). The forme r group is allied to the sandstone flora of western Arnhem Land, but is spe cies-poor in comparison, as the islands lack the deep gorges which drive mu ch of the species richness of western Arnhem Land. The latter group compris es many species with a broad geographic range across tropical coastal areas , including many species which have been shown elsewhere to be highly vagil e. Many species of the former set appear to have been lost from the smaller islands. The island flora has been influenced by three sets of human manag ers. Aboriginal use of the islands has been long-standing and probably resu lted in a fire regime which may have accentuated environmental patchiness. Centuries of wet-season use of some islands by Macassan trepang-harvesters, ending early this century, has apparently left few effects other than the persistence of occasional small populations of an introduced food tree. In contrast, European use of these islands has been minimal and fleeting, but is associated with the introduction of most weeds.