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Ecology

Site characteristics and population structures of the endangered shrub Olearia polita (Wilson et Garnock-Jones), Nelson, New Zealand

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Pages 237-241 | Received 28 Mar 1994, Accepted 29 Aug 1994, Published online: 31 Jan 2012

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Geoffrey Rogers & Susan Walker. (2002) Taxonomic and ecological profiles of rarity in the New Zealand vascular flora. New Zealand Journal of Botany 40:1, pages 73-93.
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Articles from other publishers (5)

C. L. Gross & D. Mackay. (2014) Two decades of demography reveals that seed and seedling transitions limit population persistence in a translocated shrub. Annals of Botany 114:1, pages 85-96.
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Claudio de Sassi & Jason M. Tylianakis. (2012) Climate Change Disproportionately Increases Herbivore over Plant or Parasitoid Biomass. PLoS ONE 7:7, pages e40557.
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Julie Hinchliffe & John G. Conran. (2005) Life-class stages in coast daisy-bush (Olearia axillaris: Asteraceae) as a possible means of monitoring coastal dunes. Australian Journal of Botany 53:2, pages 133.
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MICHAEL HEADS. (1998) Biodiversity in the New Zealand divaricating tree daisies: Olearia sect. nov. (Compositae). Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society 127:3, pages 239-285.
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W.B. Shaw & B.R. Burns. (1997) The ecology and conservation of the endangered endemic shrub, Kōwhai NgutukākāClianthus puniceus in New Zealand. Biological Conservation 81:3, pages 233-245.
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