2016
DOI: 10.21000/jasmr16010001
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Case Study: Some Lessons From the Early Development of Native Forest Rehabilitation at Three Surface Mine Complexes in Australia

Abstract: Abstract:The rehabilitation of forest and other woody vegetation ecosystems on mineral extraction sites is common place and a major post-mining land use throughout Australia. Owing to the need for government certification (under Australian Government and State legislation) for mine closure, monitoring of the establishing forests or other woody ecosystems is typically undertaken using agreed completion criteria which are predictive of rehabilitation future achievement. The collation and review of the monitoring… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…Despite the apparent attainment of a stabilised ecosystem, the dense scrub structure was not the vegetation and ecosystem for the target regionally important native sand dune heath/forest described by Gravina et al 2011, and Smith and Nichols 2011. It also exhibited no evidence or indication of community renewal for its future stability as a vegetation type (Humphries 2016). This situation is not unique to the mineral sand rehabilitation and is evident in rehabilitation elsewhere.…”
Section: The Lfa/efa Vegetation Composition and Ecosystem Componentsmentioning
confidence: 97%
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“…Despite the apparent attainment of a stabilised ecosystem, the dense scrub structure was not the vegetation and ecosystem for the target regionally important native sand dune heath/forest described by Gravina et al 2011, and Smith and Nichols 2011. It also exhibited no evidence or indication of community renewal for its future stability as a vegetation type (Humphries 2016). This situation is not unique to the mineral sand rehabilitation and is evident in rehabilitation elsewhere.…”
Section: The Lfa/efa Vegetation Composition and Ecosystem Componentsmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…In the examples cited and reported by Tongway (n.d.(b)), Lacy et al (2008), DnA Environmental (2013, 2014) and EBS Ecology (2013), there is no requirement to characterise the developing vegetation community, structure and condition. While the soil surface may be nutrient rich, stable and have a high infiltration capacity, the vegetation present may not be a type that meets the rehabilitation and completion criteria objectives and/or may not be sustainable as has been pointed out for some forest rehabilitation schemes (Humphries 2016). For example, the sheoak (Alocasuarina) dominated stands on rehabilitated mineral sand mines in Queensland (Gravina et al 2011) are likely to have scored highly in the LOI and the LFA/EFA methodology.…”
Section: The Lfa/efa Vegetation Composition and Ecosystem Componentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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