Biology Reference
In-Depth Information
Remnant native vegetation,
woodland patches
and fallen timber
Chapter 2
Well managed
farm dams, wetlands
and watercourses
Chapter 6
Well managed
plantings
Chapter 3
What makes a good farm
for wildlife?
Chapter 7
Well managed paddocks,
paddock trees
and native pastures
Chapter 4
Well managed
rocky outcrops
Chapter 5
Figure 1.7: Making a good farm for wildlife requires consideration of all of the key environmental assets that
occur on a farm, each of which is the focus of a different chapter in this topic.
ways to maintain or improve farms to better integrate conservation with
agricultural production.
References
1.
Hobbs, R.J. and Yates, C.J., eds. 2000. Temperate Eucalypt Woodlands in
Australia: Biology, Conservation, Management and Restoration . Surrey Beatty
and Sons: Chipping Norton.
2.
Australian Bureau of Statistics. 2008. 'Natural resource management on
Australian farms 2006-07'. Australian Bureau of Statistics: Canberra.
3.
Bunnell, F. 1999. What habitat is an island? In Forest Wildlife and
Fragmentation: Management Implications . (Eds Rochelle, J.A., Lehmann, L.A.,
and Wisniewski, J.) pp. 1-31. Brill: Leiden, Germany.
4.
Cunningham, R.B., Lindenmayer, D.B., Crane, M., Michael, D.R., MacGregor,
C., Montague-Drake, R. and Fischer, J. 2008. The combined effects of
remnant vegetation and tree planting on farmland birds. Conservation Biology
22 : 74 2-752 .
5.
Daily, G.C., ed. 1997. Nature's Services: Societal Dependence on Natural
Ecosystems . Island Press: Washington, DC.
 
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