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Forest structure
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Alcorn, P.J., Dingle, J.K., & Hickey, J.E. (2001). Age and stand structure in a multi-aged wet eucalypt forest at the Warra silvicultural systems trial.Tasforests 13: 245-260.
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Bar-Ness, Y. (2005). Crown structure and the canopy arthropod biodiversity of 100 year old and old-growth Tasmanian Eucalyptus obliqua. Masters thesis, University of Tasmania, Hobart.
Bar-Ness, Y.D., Kirkpatrick, J.B., & McQuillan, P.B. (2006). Age and distance effects on the canopy arthropod composition of old-growth and 100-year-old Eucalyptus obliqua trees. Forest Ecology and Management 226: 290-298.
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Coops, N.C., Waring, R.H., & Landsberg, J.J. (1998). Assessing forest productivity in Australia and New Zealand using a physiologically-based model driven with averaged monthly weather data and satellite-derived estimates of canopy photosynthetic capacity. Forest Ecology and Management 104: 113-127.
Gates, G.M. (2009). Coarse woody debris, macrofungal assemblages, and sustainable forest management in a Eucalyptus obliqua forest of southern Tasmania. Doctoral thesis, University of Tasmania, Hobart.
Green, G., Gray, A., & McQuillan, P. (2004). Biodiversity impacts and sustainability implications of clearfell logging in the Weld Valley, Tasmania. Timber Workers for Forests, Kingston. pp1-19.
Grove, S.J. (2009). A decade of deadwoodology at Warra. The Tasmanian Naturalist 131: 25-35.
Harris, S., Allen, K., Baker, P., Bird, T., Bowman, D., Connolly, A., d'Arville, L., Harwood, C., Rozefelds, A. and Wardlaw, T. (2009). Guidelines for collecting and conserving dendrochronology samples from Tasmanian public reserves. Tasforests 18: 145-157.
Jarman, S.J. & Kantvilas, G. (2001). Bryophytes and lichens at the Warra LTER Site. II. Understorey habitats in Eucalyptus obliqua wet sclerophyll forest. Tasforests 13: 217-244.
Neyland, M.G. (2004). Selection, harvesting damage, burning damage and persistence of retained trees following dispersed retention harvesting in the Warra silvicultural systems trial in Tasmania. Tasforests 15: 55-66.
Peacock, R. (2009). A private native forestry metric to assess forest structural change. RIRDC Report 09/019: 35 pp. Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation, Canberra.
Scanlan, I., McElhinny, C. and Turner, P. (2010). A methodology for modelling canopy structure: an exploratory analysis in the tall wet eucalypt forests of
southern Tasmania. Forests 1: 4-24.
Shapcott, A., Brown, M.J., Kirkpatrick, J.B., & Reid, J.B. (1995). Stand structure, reproductive activity and sex expressions in Huon pine (Lagarostrobos franklinii (Hook.f.) Quinn.). Journal of Biogeography 22: 1035-1045.
Su, W. & Mackey, B. (1997). A spatially explicit and temporal dynamic simulation model of forest landscape ecosystems. In Modelling and Simulation 97, Hobart.
Su, W., Brown, M.J., & Mackey, B. (2001). Agent-based dynamic modelling of forest ecosystems at the Warra LTER Site. Tasforests 13: 129-140.
Turner, P.A.M. & Pharo, E.J. (2005). Influence of substrate type and forest age on bryophyte species distribution in Tasmanian mixed forest. The Bryologist 108: 67-85.
Turner, P.A.M., Kirkpatrick, J.B., & Pharo, E.J. (2006). Bryophyte relationships with environmental and structural variables in Tasmanian old growth mixed eucalypt forest. Australian Journal of Botany 54(3): 239-247.
Wardlaw, T., Grove, S., Hopkins, A., Yee, M., Harrison K. and Mohammed, C. (2009). The uniqueness of habitats in old eucalypts: contrasting wood-decay fungi and saproxylic beetles of young and old eucalypts. Tasforests 18: 17-32.
Westphalen, G. (2003). The ecology of edges in Tasmanian wet forests managed for wood production. Doctoral thesis, University of Tasmania, Hobart.
Woldendorp, G. & Keenan, R.J. (2005). Coarse woody debris in Australian forest ecosystems: a review. Austral Ecology 30: 834-843.
Woldendorp, G., Spencer, R.D., Keenan, R.J., & Barry, S. (2002). An analysis of sampling methods for coarse woody debris in Australian forest ecosystems. Bureau of Rural Sciences, Canberra.
Yee, M. (2005). The ecology and habitat requirements of saproxylic beetles native to Tasmanian wet eucalypt forests: potential impacts of commercial forestry practices. PhD, University of Tasmania, Hobart.
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