Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Institution
- Keyword
-
- Western Australia (16)
- Nectar plants (12)
- Beekeeping (1)
- Beetle preferences (1)
- Disturbance (1)
-
- Eucalyptus (1)
- Eucalyptus accedens (1)
- Eucalyptus albida (1)
- Eucalyptus cooperiana (1)
- Eucalyptus cornuta Labill (1)
- Eucalyptus dongarraenis (1)
- Eucalyptus eudesmioides (1)
- Eucalyptus griffithsii Maiden (1)
- Eucalyptus kruseana (1)
- Eucalyptus macrandra (1)
- Eucalyptus odontocarpa (1)
- Eucalyptus rhodantha (1)
- Eucalyptus tetrodonta (1)
- Logging (1)
- Publication
- Publication Type
Articles 1 - 17 of 17
Full-Text Articles in Forest Sciences
Successful Commercial Beekeeping, R S. Coleman
Successful Commercial Beekeeping, R S. Coleman
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
THE eye of the master fattens the cattle. One of the oldest farming proverbs this is as true of bee-keeping as any other branch of farming.
Careful husbandry is the basis of all successful bee-keeping; anything else is secondary.
Honey Flora Calendar For April, R S. Coleman
Honey Flora Calendar For April, R S. Coleman
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
A look at flora available in April
Honey Flora Calendar For February, R S. Coleman
Honey Flora Calendar For February, R S. Coleman
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
A look at Flora available in February
Trees Of Western Australia. 83. The Many Flowered Mallee (Eucalyptus Cooperiana F. Muell). 84. The Yate (E. Cornuta Labill.). 85. The Grey Gum (E. Griffithsii Maiden). 86. E. Albida (Maiden And Blakely), Charles Austin Gardner
Trees Of Western Australia. 83. The Many Flowered Mallee (Eucalyptus Cooperiana F. Muell). 84. The Yate (E. Cornuta Labill.). 85. The Grey Gum (E. Griffithsii Maiden). 86. E. Albida (Maiden And Blakely), Charles Austin Gardner
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
THIS species was described by Mueller in February, 1880, from a fragment with buds and flowers without fruits, collected by George Maxwell in South-Western Australia, without any locality.
It remained imperfectly known until a few years ago when a specimen was collected, again without precise locality, but somewhere between Esperance and Eyre,
Honey Flora Calendar For January, R S. Coleman
Honey Flora Calendar For January, R S. Coleman
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
A look at flora available in January.
Honey Flora Calendar For March, R S. Coleman
Honey Flora Calendar For March, R S. Coleman
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
A look at flora available in March
Honey Flora Calendar For May, R S. Coleman
Honey Flora Calendar For May, R S. Coleman
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
Flora available in May
Honey Flora Calendar For July, R S. Coleman
Honey Flora Calendar For July, R S. Coleman
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
A look at Flora available in July
Trees Of Western Australia. 87. Eucalyptus Kruseana F. Muell. 88. Eucalyptus Macrandra F. Muell. Ex. Benth. 89. Mallalie. 90. The Rose Mallee (Eucalyptus Rhodantha Blakely And Steedman), Charles Austin Gardner
Trees Of Western Australia. 87. Eucalyptus Kruseana F. Muell. 88. Eucalyptus Macrandra F. Muell. Ex. Benth. 89. Mallalie. 90. The Rose Mallee (Eucalyptus Rhodantha Blakely And Steedman), Charles Austin Gardner
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
THIS very decorative shrub was described by Baron von Mueller in the Australian Journal of Pharmacy in 1895 from specimens collected in the Fraser Range.
Honey Flora Calendar For September, R S. Coleman
Honey Flora Calendar For September, R S. Coleman
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
A look at Flora available in September.
Honey Flora Calendar For October, R S. Coleman
Honey Flora Calendar For October, R S. Coleman
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
Some of the Flora available in October
Trees Of Western Australia. 91. The Powder Barked Wandoo (Eucalyptus Accedens - W.V. Fitzgerald). 92. The Dongara Mallee (Eucalyptus Dongarraenis - Maiden And Blakely). 93. The Messmate Or Stringbark (Eucalyptus Tetrodonta F. Muell). 94. The Sturt Creek Mallee (Eucalyptus Odontocarpa F. Muell), Charles Austin Gardner
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
THIS species was originally named by W. V. Fitzgerald from specimens which he obtained from near Pingelly in November, 1903.
The name accedens is from the Latin accedo—to approach or come near—and is here used in reference to the supposed close approach of the tree to the common wandoo (Eucalyptus redunca var. elata).
Honey Flora Calendar For August, R S. Coleman
Honey Flora Calendar For August, R S. Coleman
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
A look at Flora available in August.
Honey Flora Calendar For November, R S. Coleman
Honey Flora Calendar For November, R S. Coleman
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
A look at the Flora available in November.
Honey Flora Calendar For December, R S. Coleman
Honey Flora Calendar For December, R S. Coleman
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
A look at flora available in December
Honey Flora Calendar For June, R S. Coleman
Honey Flora Calendar For June, R S. Coleman
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
Flora available in June
Influence Of Logging On Douglas Fir Beetle Populations, R R. Lejeune, L H. Mcmullen, M D. Atkins
Influence Of Logging On Douglas Fir Beetle Populations, R R. Lejeune, L H. Mcmullen, M D. Atkins
The Bark Beetles, Fuels, and Fire Bibliography
All species of bark beetles of economic importance prefer to attack freshly-killed host material. Logging slash, wind-throw, and fire-killed timber provide ideal breeding grounds for bark beetles. A few species, mostly in the Dendroctonus group, are able to kill living trees. When beetles in the group, raised in preferred host material, cannot find any or enough freshly-killed trees, logs, or slash to enter, they may attack living trees. In the interior of British Columbia, infestations of the Douglas fir beetle can often be traced to logging disturbance.