Recovery of alpine herbfield on a closed walking track in the Kosciuszko Alpine Zone, Australia

Human use of arctic and alpine environments can result in damage to the natural vegetation and soils. Restoration of the damage can have limited success due to the severity of the environment, which restricts plant germination and growth and increases the potential for soil erosion. In this study, w...

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Main Authors: Scherrer, Pascal, Pickering, Catherine M
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: ePublications@SCU 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:https://epubs.scu.edu.au/tourism_pubs/509
https://epubs.scu.edu.au/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1510&context=tourism_pubs
id ftsoutherncu:oai:epubs.scu.edu.au:tourism_pubs-1510
record_format openpolar
spelling ftsoutherncu:oai:epubs.scu.edu.au:tourism_pubs-1510 2023-05-15T15:06:18+02:00 Recovery of alpine herbfield on a closed walking track in the Kosciuszko Alpine Zone, Australia Scherrer, Pascal Pickering, Catherine M 2006-01-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://epubs.scu.edu.au/tourism_pubs/509 https://epubs.scu.edu.au/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1510&context=tourism_pubs unknown ePublications@SCU School of Tourism and Hospitality Management tourism alpine herbfield Kosciusko restoration vegetation recovery Natural Resources and Conservation article 2006 ftsoutherncu 2019-08-06T12:42:57Z Human use of arctic and alpine environments can result in damage to the natural vegetation and soils. Restoration of the damage can have limited success due to the severity of the environment, which restricts plant germination and growth and increases the potential for soil erosion. In this study, we evaluated the success of restoration of a closed track in the alpine area around continental Australia's highest mountain, Mount Kosciuszko. Vegetation and soils along a 4 km walking track (that was closed and rehabilitated more than 15 yr ago) were compared with the adjacent undisturbed vegetation and soils. There was limited success in restoration with clear differences in soil nutrients, extent of vegetation cover, plant species composition, and height of vegetation between the track and adjacent natural vegetation sampled using 1 m2 quadrats. The study highlights the need for limiting disturbance in such environments, and for ongoing rehabilitation in areas that have been disturbed. It also indicates that when non-native species are used in rehabilitation, they may not necessarily be succeeded by natives, particularly if soil conditions do not return to a state similar to undisturbed areas. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Southern Cross University: epublications@SCU Arctic Kosciusko ENVELOPE(-132.217,-132.217,-75.717,-75.717)
institution Open Polar
collection Southern Cross University: epublications@SCU
op_collection_id ftsoutherncu
language unknown
topic tourism
alpine
herbfield
Kosciusko
restoration
vegetation recovery
Natural Resources and Conservation
spellingShingle tourism
alpine
herbfield
Kosciusko
restoration
vegetation recovery
Natural Resources and Conservation
Scherrer, Pascal
Pickering, Catherine M
Recovery of alpine herbfield on a closed walking track in the Kosciuszko Alpine Zone, Australia
topic_facet tourism
alpine
herbfield
Kosciusko
restoration
vegetation recovery
Natural Resources and Conservation
description Human use of arctic and alpine environments can result in damage to the natural vegetation and soils. Restoration of the damage can have limited success due to the severity of the environment, which restricts plant germination and growth and increases the potential for soil erosion. In this study, we evaluated the success of restoration of a closed track in the alpine area around continental Australia's highest mountain, Mount Kosciuszko. Vegetation and soils along a 4 km walking track (that was closed and rehabilitated more than 15 yr ago) were compared with the adjacent undisturbed vegetation and soils. There was limited success in restoration with clear differences in soil nutrients, extent of vegetation cover, plant species composition, and height of vegetation between the track and adjacent natural vegetation sampled using 1 m2 quadrats. The study highlights the need for limiting disturbance in such environments, and for ongoing rehabilitation in areas that have been disturbed. It also indicates that when non-native species are used in rehabilitation, they may not necessarily be succeeded by natives, particularly if soil conditions do not return to a state similar to undisturbed areas.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Scherrer, Pascal
Pickering, Catherine M
author_facet Scherrer, Pascal
Pickering, Catherine M
author_sort Scherrer, Pascal
title Recovery of alpine herbfield on a closed walking track in the Kosciuszko Alpine Zone, Australia
title_short Recovery of alpine herbfield on a closed walking track in the Kosciuszko Alpine Zone, Australia
title_full Recovery of alpine herbfield on a closed walking track in the Kosciuszko Alpine Zone, Australia
title_fullStr Recovery of alpine herbfield on a closed walking track in the Kosciuszko Alpine Zone, Australia
title_full_unstemmed Recovery of alpine herbfield on a closed walking track in the Kosciuszko Alpine Zone, Australia
title_sort recovery of alpine herbfield on a closed walking track in the kosciuszko alpine zone, australia
publisher ePublications@SCU
publishDate 2006
url https://epubs.scu.edu.au/tourism_pubs/509
https://epubs.scu.edu.au/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1510&context=tourism_pubs
long_lat ENVELOPE(-132.217,-132.217,-75.717,-75.717)
geographic Arctic
Kosciusko
geographic_facet Arctic
Kosciusko
genre Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
op_source School of Tourism and Hospitality Management
_version_ 1766337926855131136