Newer
Older
Digital_Repository / Misc / Mass downloads / UTas / 2424.html
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN"
"http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd">
<html>
  <head>
    <title>UTas ePrints - Turner Review No. 10 Why do evergreen trees dominate the Australian seasonal tropics?</title>
    <script type="text/javascript" src="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/javascript/auto.js"><!-- padder --></script>
    <style type="text/css" media="screen">@import url(http://eprints.utas.edu.au/style/auto.css);</style>
    <style type="text/css" media="print">@import url(http://eprints.utas.edu.au/style/print.css);</style>
    <link rel="icon" href="/images/eprints/favicon.ico" type="image/x-icon" />
    <link rel="shortcut icon" href="/images/eprints/favicon.ico" type="image/x-icon" />
    <link rel="Top" href="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/" />
    <link rel="Search" href="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/cgi/search" />
    <meta content="Bowman, David M.J.S." name="eprints.creators_name" />
<meta content="Prior, L.D." name="eprints.creators_name" />
<meta content="David.Bowman@utas.edu.au" name="eprints.creators_id" />
<meta name="eprints.creators_id" />
<meta content="article" name="eprints.type" />
<meta content="2007-11-11 22:16:10" name="eprints.datestamp" />
<meta content="2008-02-11T00:15:20Z" name="eprints.lastmod" />
<meta content="show" name="eprints.metadata_visibility" />
<meta content="Turner Review No. 10 Why do evergreen trees dominate the Australian seasonal tropics?
" name="eprints.title" />
<meta content="pub" name="eprints.ispublished" />
<meta content="270402" name="eprints.subjects" />
<meta content="270400" name="eprints.subjects" />
<meta content="270000" name="eprints.subjects" />
<meta content="restricted" name="eprints.full_text_status" />
<meta content="The northern Australian woody vegetation is predominantly evergreen despite an intensely seasonal climate and a diversity of deciduous species in the regional flora. From a global climatic perspective the dominance of evergreen rather than deciduous trees in the Australian savannas is apparently anomalous when compared with other savannas of the world. However, this pattern is not unexpected in light of existing theory that emphasises photosynthetic return relative to cost of investment between deciduous and evergreen species. (a) Climatically, monsoonal Australia is more extreme in terms of rainfall seasonality and variability and high air temperatures than most other parts of the seasonally dry tropics. Existing theory predicts that extreme variability and high temperatures favour evergreen trees that can maximise the period during which leaves assimilate CO2. (b) Soil infertility is known to favour evergreens, given the physiological cost of leaf construction, and the northern Australian vegetation grows mainly on deeply weathered and infertile Tertiary regoliths. (c) These regoliths also provide stores of ground water that evergreens are able to exploit during seasonal drought, thereby maintaining near constant transpiration throughout the year. (d) Fire disturbance appears to be an important secondary factor in explaining the dominance of evergreens in the monsoon tropics, based on the fact that most deciduous tree species of the region are restricted to small fire-protected sites. (e) Evolutionary history cannot explain the predominance of evergreens, given the existence of a wide range of deciduous species, including deciduous eucalypts, in the regional tree flora." name="eprints.abstract" />
<meta content="2005" name="eprints.date" />
<meta content="published" name="eprints.date_type" />
<meta content="Australian Journal of Botany" name="eprints.publication" />
<meta content="53" name="eprints.volume" />
<meta content="5" name="eprints.number" />
<meta content="379-399" name="eprints.pagerange" />
<meta content="10.1071/BT05022" name="eprints.id_number" />
<meta content="TRUE" name="eprints.refereed" />
<meta content="0067-1924" name="eprints.issn" />
<meta content="http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/BT05022" name="eprints.official_url" />
<meta content="Aerts R (1995) The advantages of being evergreen. Trends in Ecology &amp; Evolution 10, 402–407. 
   

Andersen AN, Lonsdale WM (1990) Herbivory by insects in Australian tropical savannas: a review. Journal of Biogeography 17, 433–444. 
 

Andersen AN, Orgeas K, Blanche RD, Lowe LM (2003) Terrestrial insects. In ‘Fire in tropical savannas: the Kapalga experiment’. pp. 107–125. (Springer: New York) 

Antúnez I, Retamosa EC, Villar R (2001) Relative growth rate in phylogenetically related deciduous and evergreen woody species. Oecologia 128, 172–180. 
   

Axelrod DI (1966) Origin of deciduous and evergreen habits in temperate forests. Evolution 20, 1–15. 
 

Bach CS (1998) Resource patchiness in space and time: phenology and reproductive traits of monsoon rainforest in the Northern Territory, Australia. PhD Thesis (Northern Territory University: Darwin) 

Bach CS (2002) Phenological patterns in monsoon rainforests in the Northern Territory, Australia. Austral Ecology 27, 477–489. 
   

Baker TR, Burslem D, Swaine MD (2003) Associations between tree growth, soil fertility and water availability at local and regional scales in Ghanaian tropical rain forest. Journal of Tropical Ecology 19, 109–125. 
   

Bell DT, Williams JE (1997) Eucalypt ecophysiology. In ‘Eucalypt ecology: individuals to ecosystems’. pp. 168–196. (Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, UK) 

Bhat DM, Murali KS (2001) Phenology of understorey species of tropical moist forest of western Ghats region of Uttara Kannada district in South India. Current Science 81, 799–805. 
 

Bollen A, Donati G (2005) Phenology of the littoral forest of Sainte Luce, southeastern Madagascar. Biotropica 37, 32–43. 
 

Borchert R (1994a) Induction of rehydration and bud break by irrigation or rain in deciduous trees of a tropical dry forest in Costa Rica. Trees 8, 198–204. 
   

Borchert R (1994b) Water status and development of tropical trees during seasonal drought. Trees—Structure and Function 8, 115–125. 
 

Borchert R (1994c) Soil and stem water storage determine phenology and distribution of tropical dry forest trees. Ecology 75, 1437–1449. 
 

Borchert R (1998) Responses of tropical trees to rainfall seasonality and its long-term changes. Climatic Change 39, 381–393. 
   

Borchert R, Rivera G (2001) Photoperiodic control of seasonal development and dormancy in tropical stem-succulent trees. Tree Physiology 21, 213–221. 


Bowman DMJS (1992) Monsoon forests in North-western Australia–II. Forest–savanna transitions. Australian Journal of Botany 40, 89–102. 
 

Bowman DMJS (2000) ‘Australian rainforests: islands of green in the land of fire.’ (Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, UK) 

Bowman DMJS (2002) The Australian summer monsoon: a biogeographic perspective. Australian Geographical Studies 40, 261–277. 
   

Bowman DMJS (2003) Australian landscape burning: a continental and evolutionary perspective. In ‘Fire in south-western Australian ecosystems: impacts and management’. pp. 107–118. (Backhuys: Leiden, The Netherlands) 

Bowman DMJS (2005) Commentary: understanding a flammable planet—climate, fire and global vegetation patterns. New Phytologist 165, 341–345. 
  

Bowman DMJS, Connors GT (1996) Does low temperature cause the dominance of Acacia on the central Australian mountains? Evidence from a latitudinal gradient from 11° to 26° south in the Northern Territory, Australia. Journal of Biogeography 23, 245–256. 
   

Bowman DMJS, Wilson BA, Woinarski JCZ (1991) Floristic and phenological variation in a northern Australian rocky Eucalyptus savanna. Proceedings of the Royal Society of Queensland 101, 79–90. 
 

Bowman DMJS, Woinarski JCZ, Menkhorst KA (1993) Environmental correlates of tree species diversity in Stage III of Kakadu National Park, Northern Australia. Australian Journal of Botany 41, 649–660. 
 

Bowman DMJS, Wilson BA, Fensham RJ (1999) Relative drought tolerance of evergreen-rainforest and evergreen-savanna species in a long unburnt Eucalyptus savanna, north Queensland. Proceedings of the Royal Society of Queensland 108, 27–31. 
 

Bowman D, Walsh A, Prior LD (2004) Landscape analysis of Aboriginal fire management in Central Arnhem Land, north Australia. Journal of Biogeography 31, 207–223. 
   

Bullock SH, Solis-Magallanes JA (1990) Phenology of canopy trees of a tropical deciduous forest in Mexico. Biotropica 22, 22–35. 
 

Brook BW, Bowman D (2002) Explaining the Pleistocene megafaunal extinctions: models, chronologies, and assumptions. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 99, 14 624–14 627. 
   

Burrows GE (2002) Epicormic strand structure in Angophora, Eucalyptus and Lophostemon (Myrtaceae)—implications for fire resistance and recovery. New Phytologist 153, 111–131. 
   

Carr SGM (1972) Problems of the geography of the tropical eucalypts. In ‘Bridge and barrier: the natural and cultural history of Torres Strait’. pp. 153–182. (Australian National University: Canberra) 

Chabot B, Hicks D (1982) The ecology of leaf life spans. Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics 13, 229–259. 
   

Chen X, Eamus D, Hutley LB (2002) Seasonal patterns of soil carbon dioxide efflux from a wet–dry tropical savanna of northern Australia. Australian Journal of Botany 50, 43–51. 
   

Chen X, Eamus D, Hutley LB (2004) Seasonal patterns of fine-root productivity and turnover in a tropical savanna of northern Australia. Journal of Tropical Ecology 20, 221–224. 
   

Coley PD, Barone JA (1996) Herbivory and plant defenses in tropical forests. Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics 27, 305–335. 
   

Coley PD, Bryant JP, Chapin FS (1985) Resource availability and plant antiherbivore defense. Science 230, 895–899. 
 

Commonwealth Bureau of Meteorology (2004) Climate maps—Evapotranspiration. http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/averages/climatology/evapotrans/et.shtml 


Condit R, Watts K, Bohlman SA, Perez R, Foster RB, Hubbell SP (2000) Quantifying the deciduousness of tropical forest canopies under varying climates. Journal of Vegetation Science 11, 649–658. 
 

Cook GD, Heerdegen RG (2001) Spatial variation in the duration of the rainy season in monsoonal Australia. International Journal of Climatology 21, 1723–1732. 
   

Cook GD, Williams RJ, Hutley LB, O’Grady AP, Liedloff AC (2002) Variation in vegetative water use in the savannas of the north Australian tropical transect. Journal of Vegetation Science 13, 413–418. 
 

Cook PG, Hatton TJ, Pidsley D, Herczeg AL, Held A, O’Grady A, Eamus D (1998) Water balance of a tropical woodland ecosystem, Northern Australia: a combination of micro-meteorological, soil physical and groundwater chemical approaches. Journal of Hydrology 210, 161–177. 
   

Cornelissen JHC, Castro-Diez P, Hunt R (1996) Seedling growth, allocation and leaf attributes in a wide range of woody plant species and types. Journal of Ecology 84, 755–765. 
 

Crisp M, Cook L, Steane D (2004) Radiation of the Australian flora: what can comparisons of molecular phylogenies across multiple taxa tell us about the evolution of diversity in present-day communities. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological Sciences 359, 1551–1571. 
  

Crisp MD, Linder HP, Weston PH (1995) Cladistic biogeography of plants in Australia and New Guinea: congruent pattern reveals two endemic tropical tracks. Systematic Biology 44, 457–473. 
 

Cuevas E (1995) Biology of the belowground system of tropical dry forests. In ‘Seasonally dry tropical forests’. pp. 362–383. (Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, UK) 

D’Antonio CM, Vitousek PM (1992) Biological invasions by exotic grasses, the grass/fire cycle, and global change. Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics 23, 63–87. 
 

Daubenmire R (1972) Phenology and other characteristics of tropical semi-deciduous forest in north-western Costa Rica. Journal of Ecology 60, 147–170. 
 

de Bie S, Ketner P, Paasse M, Geerling C (1998) Woody plant phenology in the West Africa savanna. Journal of Biogeography 25, 883–900. 
   

De Fries RS, Hansen MC, Townshend JRG, Janetos AC, Loveland TR (2000) A new global 1-km dataset of percentage tree cover derived from remote sensing. Global Change 6, 247–254. 
   

Devineau JL (1999) Seasonal rhythms and phenological plasticity of savanna woody species in a fallow farming system (south-west Burkina Faso). Journal of Tropical Ecology 15, 497–513. 
   

Dhamanitayakul P (1984) The phenology of trees in dry dipterocarp forest and its application to timing for logging operations. Thai Journal of Forestry 3, 151–162. [in Thai]; cited by Rundel P, Boonpragob K (1995) Dry forest ecosystems of Thailand. In ‘Seasonally dry tropical forests’. (Eds SH Bullock, HA Mooney, E Medina) pp. 93–123. (Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, UK) 


Drosdowsky W (1996) Variability of the Australian summer monsoon at Darwin: 1957–1992. Journal of Climate 9, 85–96. 
   

Eamus D, Prichard H (1998) A cost–benefit analysis of leaves of four Australian savanna species. Tree Physiology 18, 537–545. 


Eamus D, Prior L (2001) Ecophysiology of trees of seasonally dry tropics: comparisons among phenologies. Advances in Ecological Research 32, 113–197. 
   

Eamus D, Chen X, Kelley G, Hutley LB (2002) Root biomass and root fractal analyses of an open Eucalyptus forest in a savanna of north Australia. Australian Journal of Botany 50, 31–41. 
   

Eamus D, Myers B, Duff G, Williams R (1999a) A cost–benefit analysis of leaves of eight Australian savanna tree species of differing leaf life-span. Photosynthetica 36, 575–586. 
   

Eamus D, Myers B, Duff G, Williams R (1999b) Seasonal changes in photosynthesis of eight savanna tree species. Tree Physiology 19, 665–671. 


Eamus D, O’Grady AP, Hutley L (2000) Dry season conditions determine wet season water use in the wet–dry tropical savannas of northern Australia. Tree Physiology 20, 1219–1226. 


Egan JL, Williams RJ (1996) Lifeform distributions of woodland plant species along a moisture availability gradient in Australia’s monsoonal tropics. Australian Systematic Botany 9, 205–217. 
   

Eva HD, Belward AS, De Miranda EE, De Bella CM, Gond V, Huber O, Jones SJ, Sgrenzaroli M, Fritz S (2004) A land cover map of South America. Global Change Biology 10, 731–744. 
   

FAO (2001) ‘Global ecological zoning for the Global Forest Resources Assessment 2000 final report.’ (Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations: Rome) http://www.fao.org/documents/show_cdr.asp?url_file=/docrep/006/ad652e/ad652e07.htm 


Fatubarin A (1985) Observations on the phenology of the woody plants and grasses in a savanna ecosystem in Nigeria. Tropical Ecology 26, 32–42. 
 

Fensham RJ (1994) Phytophagous insect–woody sprout interactions in tropical eucalypt forest. I. Insect herbivory. Australian Journal of Botany 19, 178–188. 
 

Fensham RJ, Bowman DMJS (1995) A comparison of foliar nutrient concentration in trees from monsoon rainforest and savanna in northern Australia. Australian Journal of Ecology 20, 335–339. 
 

Fensham RJ, Holman JE (1999) Temporal and spatial patterns in drought-related tree dieback in Australian savanna. Journal of Applied Ecology 36, 1035–1050. 
   

Fine PVA, Mesones I, Coley PD (2004) Herbivores promote habitat specialization by trees in Amazonian forests. Science 305, 663–665. 
  

Frankie GW, Baker HG, Opler PA (1974) Comparative phenological studies of trees in tropical wet and dry forests in the lowlands of Costa Rica. Journal of Ecology 62, 881–913. 
 

Frost P (1996) The ecology of miombo woodlands. In ‘The miombo in transition: woodlands and welfare in Africa’. pp. 11–57. (Center for International Forestry Research: Bogor, Indonesia) 

Funch LS, Funch R, Barroso GM (2002) Phenology of gallery and montane forest in the Chapada Diamantina, Bahia, Brazil. Biotropica 34, 40–50. 
 

Gartner BL, Bullock SH, Mooney HA, Brown B, Whitbeck JL (1990) Water transport properties of vine and tree stems in a tropical deciduous forest. American Journal of Botany 77, 742–749. 
 

Gentry A (1995) Diversity and floristic composition of neotropical dry forests. In ‘Seasonally dry tropical forests’. pp. 146–194. (Cambridge University Press: Cambridge UK) 

Givnish TJ (2002) Adaptive significance of evergreen vs. deciduous leaves: solving the triple paradox. Silva Fennica 36, 703–743. 
 

Gill AM (1997) Eucalypts and fires: interdependent or independent? In ‘Eucalypt ecology. Individuals to ecosystems’. pp. 303–341. (Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, UK) 

Güsewell S (2004) N : P ratios in terrestrial plants: variation and functional significance. New Phytologist 164, 243–266. 
   

Haxeltine A, Prentice IC (1996) BIOME3: an equilibrium terrestrial biosphere model based on ecophysiological constraints, resource availability, and competition among plant functional types. Global Biogeochemical Cycles 10, 693–709. 
   

Holdridge LR (1947) Determination of world formations from simple climatic data. Science 105, 367–368. 
 

Holland GJ (1986) Interannual variability of the Australian summer monsoon at Darwin: 1952–82. Journal of Climate 114, 594–604. 
 

Hutley LB, O’Grady AP, Eamus D (2000) Evapotranspiration from eucalypt open-forest savanna of northern Australia. Functional Ecology 14, 183–194. 
   

Hutley LB, O’Grady AP, Eamus D (2001) Monsoonal influences on evapotranspiration of savanna vegetation of northern Australia. Oecologia 126, 434–443. 
   

Jackson IJ (1988) Daily rainfall over northern Australia: deviations from the world pattern. Journal of Climatology 8, 463–476. 
 

Janzen DH (1974) Tropical blackwater rivers, animals and mast fruiting by the Dipterocarpaceae. Biotropica 6, 69–103. 
 

Johnson CN, Prideaux GJ (2004) Extinctions of herbivorous mammals in the late Pleistocene of Australia in relation to their feeding ecology: no evidence for environmental change as cause of extinction. Austral Ecology 29, 553–557. 
   

Jolly WM, Running SW (2004) Effects of precipitation and soil water potential on drought deciduous phenology in the Kalahari. Global Change Biology 10, 303–308. 
   

Justiniano MJ, Fredericksen TS (2000) Phenology of tree species in Bolivian dry forests. Biotropica 32, 276–281. 
 

Kelley G (2002) Tree water use and soil water dynamics in a savanna of northern Australia. PhD Thesis (Northern Territory University: Darwin) 

Kimber PC (1974) The root system of jarrah (Eucalyptus marginata). Research paper no. 10. Forests Department of Western Australia, Perth. 


Köppen W (1936) Das Geographische System der Klimate. In ‘Handbuch der Klimatologie’. (Eds W Köppen, R Geiger) (Berlin); cited by Gentilli J (1972) ‘Australian climate patterns.’ (Nelson: Melbourne) 


Kushwaha C, Singh K (2005) Diversity of leaf phenology in a tropical deciduous forest in India. Journal of Tropical Ecology 21, 47–56. 
   

Lacey CJ, Whelan PI (1976) Observations on the ecological significance of vegetative reproduction in the Katherine–Darwin region of the Northern Territory. Australian Forestry 39, 131–139. 
 

Lamont BB, Groom PK, Cowling RM (2002) High leaf mass per area of related species assemblages may reflect low rainfall and carbon isotope discrimination rather than low phosphorus and nitrogen concentrations. Functional Ecology 16, 403–412. 
   

Landsberg JJ, Cork SJ (1997) Herbivory: interactions between eucalypts and the vertebrates and invertebrates that feed on them. In ‘Eucalypt ecology. Individuals to ecosystems’. pp. 342–372. (Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, UK) 

Liddle D, Russell-Smith J, Brock J, Leach GJ, Connors GT (1994) ‘Atlas of the vascular rainforest plants of the Northern Territory.’ (Australian Biological Resources Study: Canberra) 

Loveless AR (1961) A nutritional interpretation of sclerophylly based on differences in the chemical composition of sclerophyllous and mesophytic leaves. Annals of Botany NS 25, 168–184. 
 

Low T (1998) Why evergreen? Nature Australia Spring 1998, 
 

Mayaux P, Bartholomé E, Fritz S, Belward AS (2004) A new land-cover map of Africa for the year 2000. Journal of Biogeography 31, 861–877. 
   

McKenzie N, Jacquier D, Isbell R, Brown K (2004) ‘Australian soils and landscapes.’ (CSIRO Publishing: Melbourne) 

McKey D, Waterman PG, Mbi CN, Gartlan JS, Struhsaker TT (1978) Phenolic content of vegetation in two African rain forests: ecological implications. Science 202, 61–64. 
 

Medway L (1972) Phenology of a tropical rain forest in Malaya. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 4, 117–146. 
 

Menaut J, Lepage M, Abbadie L (1995) Savannas, woodlands and dry forests in Africa. In ‘Seasonally dry tropical forests’. pp. 64–92. (Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, UK) 

Mollah WS, De Launey W, Haynes MA (1991) Long-term characterstics of seasonal rainfall at Katherine, Northern Australia. Australian Geographical Studies 29, 71–92. 
 

Monasterio M, Sarmiento G (1976) Phenological strategies of plant species in the tropical savanna and the semi-deciduous forest of the Venezuelan Llanos. Journal of Biogeography 3, 325–356. 
 

Morellato LPC, Talora DC, Takahasi A, Bencke CC, Romera EC, Zipparro VB (2000) Phenology of Atlantic rain forest trees: a comparative study. Biotropica 32, 811–823. 
 

Murphy PG, Lugo AE (1986) Ecology of tropical dry forest. Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics 17, 67–88. 
   

Myers BA, Williams RJ, Fordyce I, Duff GA, Eamus D (1998) Does irrigation affect leaf phenology in deciduous and evergreen trees of the savannas of northern Australia? Australian Journal of Ecology 23, 329–339. 
 

Nepstad DC, de Carvalho CR, Davidson EA, Jipp PH, Lefebvre PA, Negreiros GH, Da Silva ED, Stone TA, Trumbore SE, Vieira S (1994) The role of deep roots in the hydrological and carbon cycles of Amazonian forests and pastures. Nature 372, 666–669. 
   

Newell EA, Mulkey SS, Wright SJ (2002) Seasonal patterns of carbohydrate storage in four tropical tree species. Oecologia 131, 333–342. 
   

Nicholls N, Drosdowsky W, Lavery B (1997) Australian rainfall variability and change. Weather 52, 66–72. 
 

Niinemets U (2001) Global-scale climatic controls of leaf dry mass per area, density, and thickness in trees and shrubs. Ecology 82, 453–469. 
 

Niinemets U, Kull O, Tenhunen JD (2004) Within-canopy variation in the rate of development of photosynthetic capacity is proportional to integrated quantum flux density in temperate deciduous trees. Plant, Cell &amp; Environment 27, 293–313. 
   

Njoku E (1963) Seasonal periodicity in the growth and development of some forest trees in Nigeria. Journal of Ecology 51, 617–624. 
 

O’Grady AP, Chen X, Eamus D, Hutley LB (2000) Composition, leaf area index and standing biomass of eucalypt open forests near Darwin in the Northern Territory, Australia. Australian Journal of Botany 48, 629–638. 
 

O’Grady AP, Eamus D, Hutley LB (1999) Transpiration increases during the dry season: patterns of tree water use in eucalypt open-forests of northern Australia. Tree Physiology 19, 591–597. 


Pate JS, Verboom WH, Galloway PD (2001) Turner Review No. 4. Co-occurrence of Proteaceae, laterite and related oligotrophic soils: coincidental associations or causative inter-relationships? Australian Journal of Botany 49, 529–560. 
   

Pole MS, Bowman DMJS (1996) Tertiary plant fossils from Australia’s Top End. Australian Systematic Botany 9, 113–126. 
   

Prentice IC, Cramer W, Harrison SP, Leemans R, Monserud RA, Solomon AM (1992) A global biome model based on plant physiology and dominance, soil properties and climate. Journal of Biogeography 19, 117–134. 
 

Prideaux G (2004)  ‘Systematics and evolution of the Sthenurine kangaroos.’ , 
 

Prior LD (1997) Ecological physiology of Eucalyptus tetrodonta F.Muell and Terminalia ferdinandiana Exell saplings in the Northern Territory. PhD Thesis (Northern Territory University: Darwin) 

Prior LD, Eamus D, Bowman D (2003) Leaf attributes in the seasonally dry tropics: a comparison of four habitats in northern Australia. Functional Ecology 17, 504–515. 
   

Prior LD, Bowman DMJS, Eamus D (2004a) Seasonal differences in leaf attributes in Australian tropical tree species: family and habitat comparisons. Functional Ecology 18, 707–718. 
   

Prior LD, Eamus D, Bowman D (2004b) Tree growth rates in north Australian savanna habitats: seasonal patterns and correlations with leaf attributes. Australian Journal of Botany 52, 303–314. 
   

Prior LD, Bowman DMJS, Eamus D (2005) Intra-specific variation in leaf attributes of four savanna tree species across a rainfall gradient in tropical Australia. Australian Journal of Botany 56, 323–335. 
   

Rawitscher F (1948) The water economy of the vegetation of the ‘Campos Cerrados’ in southern Brazil. Journal of Ecology 36, 237–268. 
 

Reich PB, Borchert R (1984) Water stress and tree phenology in a tropical dry forest in the lowlands of Costa Rica. Journal of Ecology 72, 61–74. 
 

Reich PB, Uhl C, Walters MB, Ellsworth DS (1991) Leaf lifespan as a determinant of leaf structure and function among 23 amazonian tree species. Oecologia 86, 16–24. 
   

Reich PB, Walters MB, Ellsworth DS (1992) Leaf life-span in relation to leaf, plant and stand characteristics among diverse ecosystems. Ecological Monographs 62, 365–392. 
 

Reich PB, Walters MB, Ellsworth DS (1997) From tropics to tundra: global convergence in plant functioning. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 94, 13 730–13 734. 
   

Reich PB, Uhl C, Walters MB, Prugh L, Ellsworth DS (2004) Leaf demography and phenology in Amazonian rain forest: a census of 40 000 leaves of 23 tree species. Ecological Monographs 74, 3–23. 
 

Rivera G, Elliott S, Caldas LS, Nicolossi G, Coradin VTR, Borchert R (2002) Increasing day-length induces spring flushing of tropical dry forest trees in the absence of rain. Trees—Structure and Function 16, 445–456. 
 

Rooke T, Danell K, Bergstrom R, Skarpe C, Hjalten J (2004) Defensive traits of savanna trees—the role of shoot exposure to browsers. Oikos 107, 161–171. 
   

Rossiter NA, Setterfield SA, Douglas MM, Hutley LB (2003) Testing the grass–fire cycle: alien grass invasion in the tropical savannas of northern Australia. Diversity and Distributions 9, 169–176. 
   

Russell-Smith J (1991) Classification, species richness, and environmental relations of monsoon rain forest in northern Australia. Journal of Vegetation Science 2, 259–278. 
 

Salama RB, Farrington P, Bartle GA, Watson GD (1993) The chemical evolution of groundwater in a first-order catchment and the process of salt accumulation in the soil profile. Journal of Hydrology 143, 233–258. 
   

Schimper AFW (1903) ‘Plant-geography upon a physiological basis.’ (Oxford University Press: Oxford) 

Schmidt S, Stewart GR, Turnbull MH, Erskine PD, Ashwath N (1998) Nitrogen relations of natural and disturbed plant communities in tropical Australia. Oecologia 117, 95–104. 
   

Scholes R , Hall D (1996) The carbon budget of tropical savannas, woodlands and grasslands. In ‘SCOPE 56—Global change: effects on coniferous forests and grasslands’. (Scientific Committee On Problems of the Environment (SCOPE)) http://www.icsu-scope.org/downloadpubs/scope56/contents.html 


Scholes R, Frost P, Tian Y (2004) Canopy structure in savannas along a moisture gradient on Kalahari sands. Global Change Biology 10, 292–302. 
   

Schulze E-D, Williams RJ, Farquhar GD, Schulze W, Langridge J, Miller JM, Walker BH (1998) Carbon and nitrogen isotope discrimination and nitrogen nutrition of trees along a rainfall gradient in northern Australia. Australian Journal of Plant Physiology 25, 413–425. 
 

Smith NM (2002) ‘Weeds of the wet–dry tropics of Australia.’ (Environment Centre NT Inc.: Darwin) 

Sobrado MA (1991) Cost–benefit relationships in deciduous and evergreen leaves of tropical dry forest species. Functional Ecology 5, 608–616. 
 

Sobrado MA (1993) Trade-off between water transport efficiency and leaf life-span in a tropical dry forest. Oecologia 96, 19–23. 
   

Sobrado MA, Cuenca G (1979) Aspectos del uso de agua de especies deciduas y siempreverdes en un bosque seco tropical de Venezuela. Acta Cientifica Venezolana 30, 302–308. 
 

Specht RL, Specht A (1999) ‘Australian plant communities. Dynamics of stucture, growth and biodiversity.’ (Oxford University Press: Melbourne) 

Taylor JA, Tulloch DG (1985) Rainfall in the wet–dry tropics: extreme events at Darwin and similarities between years during the period 1870–1983. Australian Journal of Ecology 10, 281–295. 
 

Turner IM (1994) Sclerophylly: primarily protective? Functional Ecology 8, 669–675. 
 

van Schaik CP (1986) Phenological changes in a Sumatran rain forest. Journal of Tropical Ecology 2, 327–347. 
 

Vigilante T, Bowman D (2004) Effects of fire history on the structure and floristic composition of woody vegetation around Kalumburu, North Kimberley, Australia: a landscape-scale natural experiment. Australian Journal of Botany 52, 381–404. 
   

Walsh RPD, Lawler DM (1981) Rainfall seasonality: description, spatial patterns and change through time. Weather 36, 201–208. 
 

Walter H (1973) ‘Vegetation of the earth in relation to climate and the eco-physiological conditions.’ (Springer-Verlag: New York) 

Werner PA, Murphy PG (2001) Size-specific biomass allocation and water content of above-and below-ground components of three Eucalyptus species in a northern Australian savanna. Australian Journal of Botany 49, 155–167. 
   

Williams RJ, Duff G, Bowman DMJS, Cook GD (1996) Variation in the composition and structure of tropical savannas as a function of rainfall and soil texture along a large-scale climatic gradient in the Northern Territory, Australia. Journal of Biogeography 23, 747–756. 
 

Williams RJ, Myers BA, Muller WJ, Duff GA, Eamus D (1997) Leaf phenology of woody species in a north Australian tropical savanna. Ecology 78, 2542–2558. 
 

Williams RJ, Cook GD, Gill AM, Moore PHR (1999) Fire regime, fire intensity and tree survival in a tropical savanna in northern Australia. Australian Journal of Ecology 24, 50–59. 
   

Wilson BA, Bowman DMJS (1994) Factors influencing tree growth in tropical savanna: studies of an abrupt Eucalyptus boundary at Yapilika, Melville Island, northern Australia. Journal of Tropical Ecology 10, 103–120. 
 

Woinarski JCZ, Recher HF, Majer JD (1997) Vertebrates of eucalypt formations. In ‘Eucalypt ecology. Individuals to ecosystems’. pp. 303–341. (Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, UK) 

Wright IJ, Reich PB, Westoby M, Ackerly DD, Baruch Z, Bongers F, Cavender-Bares J, Chapin T, Cornelissen JHC, Diemer M, Flexas J, Garnier E, Groom PK, Gulias J, Hikosaka K, Lamont BB, Lee T, Lee W, Lusk C, Midgley JJ, Navas ML, Niinemets U, Oleksyn J, Osada N, Poorter H, Poot P, Prior L, Pyankov VI, Roumet C, Thomas SC, Tjoelker MG, Veneklaas EJ, Villar R (2004) The worldwide leaf economics spectrum. Nature 428, 821–827. 
  

Young ARM (1996) ‘Environmental change in Australia since 1788.’ (Oxford University Press: Melbourne) 











Aerts R (1995) The advantages of being evergreen. Trends in Ecology &amp; Evolution 10, 402–407. 
   

Andersen AN, Lonsdale WM (1990) Herbivory by insects in Australian tropical savannas: a review. Journal of Biogeography 17, 433–444. 
 

Andersen AN, Orgeas K, Blanche RD, Lowe LM (2003) Terrestrial insects. In ‘Fire in tropical savannas: the Kapalga experiment’. pp. 107–125. (Springer: New York) 

Antúnez I, Retamosa EC, Villar R (2001) Relative growth rate in phylogenetically related deciduous and evergreen woody species. Oecologia 128, 172–180. 
   

Axelrod DI (1966) Origin of deciduous and evergreen habits in temperate forests. Evolution 20, 1–15. 
 

Bach CS (1998) Resource patchiness in space and time: phenology and reproductive traits of monsoon rainforest in the Northern Territory, Australia. PhD Thesis (Northern Territory University: Darwin) 

Bach CS (2002) Phenological patterns in monsoon rainforests in the Northern Territory, Australia. Austral Ecology 27, 477–489. 
   

Baker TR, Burslem D, Swaine MD (2003) Associations between tree growth, soil fertility and water availability at local and regional scales in Ghanaian tropical rain forest. Journal of Tropical Ecology 19, 109–125. 
   

Bell DT, Williams JE (1997) Eucalypt ecophysiology. In ‘Eucalypt ecology: individuals to ecosystems’. pp. 168–196. (Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, UK) 

Bhat DM, Murali KS (2001) Phenology of understorey species of tropical moist forest of western Ghats region of Uttara Kannada district in South India. Current Science 81, 799–805. 
 

Bollen A, Donati G (2005) Phenology of the littoral forest of Sainte Luce, southeastern Madagascar. Biotropica 37, 32–43. 
 

Borchert R (1994a) Induction of rehydration and bud break by irrigation or rain in deciduous trees of a tropical dry forest in Costa Rica. Trees 8, 198–204. 
   

Borchert R (1994b) Water status and development of tropical trees during seasonal drought. Trees—Structure and Function 8, 115–125. 
 

Borchert R (1994c) Soil and stem water storage determine phenology and distribution of tropical dry forest trees. Ecology 75, 1437–1449. 
 

Borchert R (1998) Responses of tropical trees to rainfall seasonality and its long-term changes. Climatic Change 39, 381–393. 
   

Borchert R, Rivera G (2001) Photoperiodic control of seasonal development and dormancy in tropical stem-succulent trees. Tree Physiology 21, 213–221. 


Bowman DMJS (1992) Monsoon forests in North-western Australia–II. Forest–savanna transitions. Australian Journal of Botany 40, 89–102. 
 

Bowman DMJS (2000) ‘Australian rainforests: islands of green in the land of fire.’ (Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, UK) 

Bowman DMJS (2002) The Australian summer monsoon: a biogeographic perspective. Australian Geographical Studies 40, 261–277. 
   

Bowman DMJS (2003) Australian landscape burning: a continental and evolutionary perspective. In ‘Fire in south-western Australian ecosystems: impacts and management’. pp. 107–118. (Backhuys: Leiden, The Netherlands) 

Bowman DMJS (2005) Commentary: understanding a flammable planet—climate, fire and global vegetation patterns. New Phytologist 165, 341–345. 
  

Bowman DMJS, Connors GT (1996) Does low temperature cause the dominance of Acacia on the central Australian mountains? Evidence from a latitudinal gradient from 11° to 26° south in the Northern Territory, Australia. Journal of Biogeography 23, 245–256. 
   

Bowman DMJS, Wilson BA, Woinarski JCZ (1991) Floristic and phenological variation in a northern Australian rocky Eucalyptus savanna. Proceedings of the Royal Society of Queensland 101, 79–90. 
 

Bowman DMJS, Woinarski JCZ, Menkhorst KA (1993) Environmental correlates of tree species diversity in Stage III of Kakadu National Park, Northern Australia. Australian Journal of Botany 41, 649–660. 
 

Bowman DMJS, Wilson BA, Fensham RJ (1999) Relative drought tolerance of evergreen-rainforest and evergreen-savanna species in a long unburnt Eucalyptus savanna, north Queensland. Proceedings of the Royal Society of Queensland 108, 27–31. 
 

Bowman D, Walsh A, Prior LD (2004) Landscape analysis of Aboriginal fire management in Central Arnhem Land, north Australia. Journal of Biogeography 31, 207–223. 
   

Bullock SH, Solis-Magallanes JA (1990) Phenology of canopy trees of a tropical deciduous forest in Mexico. Biotropica 22, 22–35. 
 

Brook BW, Bowman D (2002) Explaining the Pleistocene megafaunal extinctions: models, chronologies, and assumptions. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 99, 14 624–14 627. 
   

Burrows GE (2002) Epicormic strand structure in Angophora, Eucalyptus and Lophostemon (Myrtaceae)—implications for fire resistance and recovery. New Phytologist 153, 111–131. 
   

Carr SGM (1972) Problems of the geography of the tropical eucalypts. In ‘Bridge and barrier: the natural and cultural history of Torres Strait’. pp. 153–182. (Australian National University: Canberra) 

Chabot B, Hicks D (1982) The ecology of leaf life spans. Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics 13, 229–259. 
   

Chen X, Eamus D, Hutley LB (2002) Seasonal patterns of soil carbon dioxide efflux from a wet–dry tropical savanna of northern Australia. Australian Journal of Botany 50, 43–51. 
   

Chen X, Eamus D, Hutley LB (2004) Seasonal patterns of fine-root productivity and turnover in a tropical savanna of northern Australia. Journal of Tropical Ecology 20, 221–224. 
   

Coley PD, Barone JA (1996) Herbivory and plant defenses in tropical forests. Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics 27, 305–335. 
   

Coley PD, Bryant JP, Chapin FS (1985) Resource availability and plant antiherbivore defense. Science 230, 895–899. 
 

Commonwealth Bureau of Meteorology (2004) Climate maps—Evapotranspiration. http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/averages/climatology/evapotrans/et.shtml 


Condit R, Watts K, Bohlman SA, Perez R, Foster RB, Hubbell SP (2000) Quantifying the deciduousness of tropical forest canopies under varying climates. Journal of Vegetation Science 11, 649–658. 
 

Cook GD, Heerdegen RG (2001) Spatial variation in the duration of the rainy season in monsoonal Australia. International Journal of Climatology 21, 1723–1732. 
   

Cook GD, Williams RJ, Hutley LB, O’Grady AP, Liedloff AC (2002) Variation in vegetative water use in the savannas of the north Australian tropical transect. Journal of Vegetation Science 13, 413–418. 
 

Cook PG, Hatton TJ, Pidsley D, Herczeg AL, Held A, O’Grady A, Eamus D (1998) Water balance of a tropical woodland ecosystem, Northern Australia: a combination of micro-meteorological, soil physical and groundwater chemical approaches. Journal of Hydrology 210, 161–177. 
   

Cornelissen JHC, Castro-Diez P, Hunt R (1996) Seedling growth, allocation and leaf attributes in a wide range of woody plant species and types. Journal of Ecology 84, 755–765. 
 

Crisp M, Cook L, Steane D (2004) Radiation of the Australian flora: what can comparisons of molecular phylogenies across multiple taxa tell us about the evolution of diversity in present-day communities. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological Sciences 359, 1551–1571. 
  

Crisp MD, Linder HP, Weston PH (1995) Cladistic biogeography of plants in Australia and New Guinea: congruent pattern reveals two endemic tropical tracks. Systematic Biology 44, 457–473. 
 

Cuevas E (1995) Biology of the belowground system of tropical dry forests. In ‘Seasonally dry tropical forests’. pp. 362–383. (Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, UK) 

D’Antonio CM, Vitousek PM (1992) Biological invasions by exotic grasses, the grass/fire cycle, and global change. Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics 23, 63–87. 
 

Daubenmire R (1972) Phenology and other characteristics of tropical semi-deciduous forest in north-western Costa Rica. Journal of Ecology 60, 147–170. 
 

de Bie S, Ketner P, Paasse M, Geerling C (1998) Woody plant phenology in the West Africa savanna. Journal of Biogeography 25, 883–900. 
   

De Fries RS, Hansen MC, Townshend JRG, Janetos AC, Loveland TR (2000) A new global 1-km dataset of percentage tree cover derived from remote sensing. Global Change 6, 247–254. 
   

Devineau JL (1999) Seasonal rhythms and phenological plasticity of savanna woody species in a fallow farming system (south-west Burkina Faso). Journal of Tropical Ecology 15, 497–513. 
   

Dhamanitayakul P (1984) The phenology of trees in dry dipterocarp forest and its application to timing for logging operations. Thai Journal of Forestry 3, 151–162. [in Thai]; cited by Rundel P, Boonpragob K (1995) Dry forest ecosystems of Thailand. In ‘Seasonally dry tropical forests’. (Eds SH Bullock, HA Mooney, E Medina) pp. 93–123. (Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, UK) 


Drosdowsky W (1996) Variability of the Australian summer monsoon at Darwin: 1957–1992. Journal of Climate 9, 85–96. 
   

Eamus D, Prichard H (1998) A cost–benefit analysis of leaves of four Australian savanna species. Tree Physiology 18, 537–545. 


Eamus D, Prior L (2001) Ecophysiology of trees of seasonally dry tropics: comparisons among phenologies. Advances in Ecological Research 32, 113–197. 
   

Eamus D, Chen X, Kelley G, Hutley LB (2002) Root biomass and root fractal analyses of an open Eucalyptus forest in a savanna of north Australia. Australian Journal of Botany 50, 31–41. 
   

Eamus D, Myers B, Duff G, Williams R (1999a) A cost–benefit analysis of leaves of eight Australian savanna tree species of differing leaf life-span. Photosynthetica 36, 575–586. 
   

Eamus D, Myers B, Duff G, Williams R (1999b) Seasonal changes in photosynthesis of eight savanna tree species. Tree Physiology 19, 665–671. 


Eamus D, O’Grady AP, Hutley L (2000) Dry season conditions determine wet season water use in the wet–dry tropical savannas of northern Australia. Tree Physiology 20, 1219–1226. 


Egan JL, Williams RJ (1996) Lifeform distributions of woodland plant species along a moisture availability gradient in Australia’s monsoonal tropics. Australian Systematic Botany 9, 205–217. 
   

Eva HD, Belward AS, De Miranda EE, De Bella CM, Gond V, Huber O, Jones SJ, Sgrenzaroli M, Fritz S (2004) A land cover map of South America. Global Change Biology 10, 731–744. 
   

FAO (2001) ‘Global ecological zoning for the Global Forest Resources Assessment 2000 final report.’ (Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations: Rome) http://www.fao.org/documents/show_cdr.asp?url_file=/docrep/006/ad652e/ad652e07.htm 


Fatubarin A (1985) Observations on the phenology of the woody plants and grasses in a savanna ecosystem in Nigeria. Tropical Ecology 26, 32–42. 
 

Fensham RJ (1994) Phytophagous insect–woody sprout interactions in tropical eucalypt forest. I. Insect herbivory. Australian Journal of Botany 19, 178–188. 
 

Fensham RJ, Bowman DMJS (1995) A comparison of foliar nutrient concentration in trees from monsoon rainforest and savanna in northern Australia. Australian Journal of Ecology 20, 335–339. 
 

Fensham RJ, Holman JE (1999) Temporal and spatial patterns in drought-related tree dieback in Australian savanna. Journal of Applied Ecology 36, 1035–1050. 
   

Fine PVA, Mesones I, Coley PD (2004) Herbivores promote habitat specialization by trees in Amazonian forests. Science 305, 663–665. 
  

Frankie GW, Baker HG, Opler PA (1974) Comparative phenological studies of trees in tropical wet and dry forests in the lowlands of Costa Rica. Journal of Ecology 62, 881–913. 
 

Frost P (1996) The ecology of miombo woodlands. In ‘The miombo in transition: woodlands and welfare in Africa’. pp. 11–57. (Center for International Forestry Research: Bogor, Indonesia) 

Funch LS, Funch R, Barroso GM (2002) Phenology of gallery and montane forest in the Chapada Diamantina, Bahia, Brazil. Biotropica 34, 40–50. 
 

Gartner BL, Bullock SH, Mooney HA, Brown B, Whitbeck JL (1990) Water transport properties of vine and tree stems in a tropical deciduous forest. American Journal of Botany 77, 742–749. 
 

Gentry A (1995) Diversity and floristic composition of neotropical dry forests. In ‘Seasonally dry tropical forests’. pp. 146–194. (Cambridge University Press: Cambridge UK) 

Givnish TJ (2002) Adaptive significance of evergreen vs. deciduous leaves: solving the triple paradox. Silva Fennica 36, 703–743. 
 

Gill AM (1997) Eucalypts and fires: interdependent or independent? In ‘Eucalypt ecology. Individuals to ecosystems’. pp. 303–341. (Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, UK) 

Güsewell S (2004) N : P ratios in terrestrial plants: variation and functional significance. New Phytologist 164, 243–266. 
   

Haxeltine A, Prentice IC (1996) BIOME3: an equilibrium terrestrial biosphere model based on ecophysiological constraints, resource availability, and competition among plant functional types. Global Biogeochemical Cycles 10, 693–709. 
   

Holdridge LR (1947) Determination of world formations from simple climatic data. Science 105, 367–368. 
 

Holland GJ (1986) Interannual variability of the Australian summer monsoon at Darwin: 1952–82. Journal of Climate 114, 594–604. 
 

Hutley LB, O’Grady AP, Eamus D (2000) Evapotranspiration from eucalypt open-forest savanna of northern Australia. Functional Ecology 14, 183–194. 
   

Hutley LB, O’Grady AP, Eamus D (2001) Monsoonal influences on evapotranspiration of savanna vegetation of northern Australia. Oecologia 126, 434–443. 
   

Jackson IJ (1988) Daily rainfall over northern Australia: deviations from the world pattern. Journal of Climatology 8, 463–476. 
 

Janzen DH (1974) Tropical blackwater rivers, animals and mast fruiting by the Dipterocarpaceae. Biotropica 6, 69–103. 
 

Johnson CN, Prideaux GJ (2004) Extinctions of herbivorous mammals in the late Pleistocene of Australia in relation to their feeding ecology: no evidence for environmental change as cause of extinction. Austral Ecology 29, 553–557. 
   

Jolly WM, Running SW (2004) Effects of precipitation and soil water potential on drought deciduous phenology in the Kalahari. Global Change Biology 10, 303–308. 
   

Justiniano MJ, Fredericksen TS (2000) Phenology of tree species in Bolivian dry forests. Biotropica 32, 276–281. 
 

Kelley G (2002) Tree water use and soil water dynamics in a savanna of northern Australia. PhD Thesis (Northern Territory University: Darwin) 

Kimber PC (1974) The root system of jarrah (Eucalyptus marginata). Research paper no. 10. Forests Department of Western Australia, Perth. 


Köppen W (1936) Das Geographische System der Klimate. In ‘Handbuch der Klimatologie’. (Eds W Köppen, R Geiger) (Berlin); cited by Gentilli J (1972) ‘Australian climate patterns.’ (Nelson: Melbourne) 


Kushwaha C, Singh K (2005) Diversity of leaf phenology in a tropical deciduous forest in India. Journal of Tropical Ecology 21, 47–56. 
   

Lacey CJ, Whelan PI (1976) Observations on the ecological significance of vegetative reproduction in the Katherine–Darwin region of the Northern Territory. Australian Forestry 39, 131–139. 
 

Lamont BB, Groom PK, Cowling RM (2002) High leaf mass per area of related species assemblages may reflect low rainfall and carbon isotope discrimination rather than low phosphorus and nitrogen concentrations. Functional Ecology 16, 403–412. 
   

Landsberg JJ, Cork SJ (1997) Herbivory: interactions between eucalypts and the vertebrates and invertebrates that feed on them. In ‘Eucalypt ecology. Individuals to ecosystems’. pp. 342–372. (Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, UK) 

Liddle D, Russell-Smith J, Brock J, Leach GJ, Connors GT (1994) ‘Atlas of the vascular rainforest plants of the Northern Territory.’ (Australian Biological Resources Study: Canberra) 

Loveless AR (1961) A nutritional interpretation of sclerophylly based on differences in the chemical composition of sclerophyllous and mesophytic leaves. Annals of Botany NS 25, 168–184. 
 

Low T (1998) Why evergreen? Nature Australia Spring 1998, 
 

Mayaux P, Bartholomé E, Fritz S, Belward AS (2004) A new land-cover map of Africa for the year 2000. Journal of Biogeography 31, 861–877. 
   

McKenzie N, Jacquier D, Isbell R, Brown K (2004) ‘Australian soils and landscapes.’ (CSIRO Publishing: Melbourne) 

McKey D, Waterman PG, Mbi CN, Gartlan JS, Struhsaker TT (1978) Phenolic content of vegetation in two African rain forests: ecological implications. Science 202, 61–64. 
 

Medway L (1972) Phenology of a tropical rain forest in Malaya. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 4, 117–146. 
 

Menaut J, Lepage M, Abbadie L (1995) Savannas, woodlands and dry forests in Africa. In ‘Seasonally dry tropical forests’. pp. 64–92. (Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, UK) 

Mollah WS, De Launey W, Haynes MA (1991) Long-term characterstics of seasonal rainfall at Katherine, Northern Australia. Australian Geographical Studies 29, 71–92. 
 

Monasterio M, Sarmiento G (1976) Phenological strategies of plant species in the tropical savanna and the semi-deciduous forest of the Venezuelan Llanos. Journal of Biogeography 3, 325–356. 
 

Morellato LPC, Talora DC, Takahasi A, Bencke CC, Romera EC, Zipparro VB (2000) Phenology of Atlantic rain forest trees: a comparative study. Biotropica 32, 811–823. 
 

Murphy PG, Lugo AE (1986) Ecology of tropical dry forest. Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics 17, 67–88. 
   

Myers BA, Williams RJ, Fordyce I, Duff GA, Eamus D (1998) Does irrigation affect leaf phenology in deciduous and evergreen trees of the savannas of northern Australia? Australian Journal of Ecology 23, 329–339. 
 

Nepstad DC, de Carvalho CR, Davidson EA, Jipp PH, Lefebvre PA, Negreiros GH, Da Silva ED, Stone TA, Trumbore SE, Vieira S (1994) The role of deep roots in the hydrological and carbon cycles of Amazonian forests and pastures. Nature 372, 666–669. 
   

Newell EA, Mulkey SS, Wright SJ (2002) Seasonal patterns of carbohydrate storage in four tropical tree species. Oecologia 131, 333–342. 
   

Nicholls N, Drosdowsky W, Lavery B (1997) Australian rainfall variability and change. Weather 52, 66–72. 
 

Niinemets U (2001) Global-scale climatic controls of leaf dry mass per area, density, and thickness in trees and shrubs. Ecology 82, 453–469. 
 

Niinemets U, Kull O, Tenhunen JD (2004) Within-canopy variation in the rate of development of photosynthetic capacity is proportional to integrated quantum flux density in temperate deciduous trees. Plant, Cell &amp; Environment 27, 293–313. 
   

Njoku E (1963) Seasonal periodicity in the growth and development of some forest trees in Nigeria. Journal of Ecology 51, 617–624. 
 

O’Grady AP, Chen X, Eamus D, Hutley LB (2000) Composition, leaf area index and standing biomass of eucalypt open forests near Darwin in the Northern Territory, Australia. Australian Journal of Botany 48, 629–638. 
 

O’Grady AP, Eamus D, Hutley LB (1999) Transpiration increases during the dry season: patterns of tree water use in eucalypt open-forests of northern Australia. Tree Physiology 19, 591–597. 


Pate JS, Verboom WH, Galloway PD (2001) Turner Review No. 4. Co-occurrence of Proteaceae, laterite and related oligotrophic soils: coincidental associations or causative inter-relationships? Australian Journal of Botany 49, 529–560. 
   

Pole MS, Bowman DMJS (1996) Tertiary plant fossils from Australia’s Top End. Australian Systematic Botany 9, 113–126. 
   

Prentice IC, Cramer W, Harrison SP, Leemans R, Monserud RA, Solomon AM (1992) A global biome model based on plant physiology and dominance, soil properties and climate. Journal of Biogeography 19, 117–134. 
 

Prideaux G (2004)  ‘Systematics and evolution of the Sthenurine kangaroos.’ , 
 

Prior LD (1997) Ecological physiology of Eucalyptus tetrodonta F.Muell and Terminalia ferdinandiana Exell saplings in the Northern Territory. PhD Thesis (Northern Territory University: Darwin) 

Prior LD, Eamus D, Bowman D (2003) Leaf attributes in the seasonally dry tropics: a comparison of four habitats in northern Australia. Functional Ecology 17, 504–515. 
   

Prior LD, Bowman DMJS, Eamus D (2004a) Seasonal differences in leaf attributes in Australian tropical tree species: family and habitat comparisons. Functional Ecology 18, 707–718. 
   

Prior LD, Eamus D, Bowman D (2004b) Tree growth rates in north Australian savanna habitats: seasonal patterns and correlations with leaf attributes. Australian Journal of Botany 52, 303–314. 
   

Prior LD, Bowman DMJS, Eamus D (2005) Intra-specific variation in leaf attributes of four savanna tree species across a rainfall gradient in tropical Australia. Australian Journal of Botany 56, 323–335. 
   

Rawitscher F (1948) The water economy of the vegetation of the ‘Campos Cerrados’ in southern Brazil. Journal of Ecology 36, 237–268. 
 

Reich PB, Borchert R (1984) Water stress and tree phenology in a tropical dry forest in the lowlands of Costa Rica. Journal of Ecology 72, 61–74. 
 

Reich PB, Uhl C, Walters MB, Ellsworth DS (1991) Leaf lifespan as a determinant of leaf structure and function among 23 amazonian tree species. Oecologia 86, 16–24. 
   

Reich PB, Walters MB, Ellsworth DS (1992) Leaf life-span in relation to leaf, plant and stand characteristics among diverse ecosystems. Ecological Monographs 62, 365–392. 
 

Reich PB, Walters MB, Ellsworth DS (1997) From tropics to tundra: global convergence in plant functioning. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 94, 13 730–13 734. 
   

Reich PB, Uhl C, Walters MB, Prugh L, Ellsworth DS (2004) Leaf demography and phenology in Amazonian rain forest: a census of 40 000 leaves of 23 tree species. Ecological Monographs 74, 3–23. 
 

Rivera G, Elliott S, Caldas LS, Nicolossi G, Coradin VTR, Borchert R (2002) Increasing day-length induces spring flushing of tropical dry forest trees in the absence of rain. Trees—Structure and Function 16, 445–456. 
 

Rooke T, Danell K, Bergstrom R, Skarpe C, Hjalten J (2004) Defensive traits of savanna trees—the role of shoot exposure to browsers. Oikos 107, 161–171. 
   

Rossiter NA, Setterfield SA, Douglas MM, Hutley LB (2003) Testing the grass–fire cycle: alien grass invasion in the tropical savannas of northern Australia. Diversity and Distributions 9, 169–176. 
   

Russell-Smith J (1991) Classification, species richness, and environmental relations of monsoon rain forest in northern Australia. Journal of Vegetation Science 2, 259–278. 
 

Salama RB, Farrington P, Bartle GA, Watson GD (1993) The chemical evolution of groundwater in a first-order catchment and the process of salt accumulation in the soil profile. Journal of Hydrology 143, 233–258. 
   

Schimper AFW (1903) ‘Plant-geography upon a physiological basis.’ (Oxford University Press: Oxford) 

Schmidt S, Stewart GR, Turnbull MH, Erskine PD, Ashwath N (1998) Nitrogen relations of natural and disturbed plant communities in tropical Australia. Oecologia 117, 95–104. 
   

Scholes R , Hall D (1996) The carbon budget of tropical savannas, woodlands and grasslands. In ‘SCOPE 56—Global change: effects on coniferous forests and grasslands’. (Scientific Committee On Problems of the Environment (SCOPE)) http://www.icsu-scope.org/downloadpubs/scope56/contents.html 


Scholes R, Frost P, Tian Y (2004) Canopy structure in savannas along a moisture gradient on Kalahari sands. Global Change Biology 10, 292–302. 
   

Schulze E-D, Williams RJ, Farquhar GD, Schulze W, Langridge J, Miller JM, Walker BH (1998) Carbon and nitrogen isotope discrimination and nitrogen nutrition of trees along a rainfall gradient in northern Australia. Australian Journal of Plant Physiology 25, 413–425. 
 

Smith NM (2002) ‘Weeds of the wet–dry tropics of Australia.’ (Environment Centre NT Inc.: Darwin) 

Sobrado MA (1991) Cost–benefit relationships in deciduous and evergreen leaves of tropical dry forest species. Functional Ecology 5, 608–616. 
 

Sobrado MA (1993) Trade-off between water transport efficiency and leaf life-span in a tropical dry forest. Oecologia 96, 19–23. 
   

Sobrado MA, Cuenca G (1979) Aspectos del uso de agua de especies deciduas y siempreverdes en un bosque seco tropical de Venezuela. Acta Cientifica Venezolana 30, 302–308. 
 

Specht RL, Specht A (1999) ‘Australian plant communities. Dynamics of stucture, growth and biodiversity.’ (Oxford University Press: Melbourne) 

Taylor JA, Tulloch DG (1985) Rainfall in the wet–dry tropics: extreme events at Darwin and similarities between years during the period 1870–1983. Australian Journal of Ecology 10, 281–295. 
 

Turner IM (1994) Sclerophylly: primarily protective? Functional Ecology 8, 669–675. 
 

van Schaik CP (1986) Phenological changes in a Sumatran rain forest. Journal of Tropical Ecology 2, 327–347. 
 

Vigilante T, Bowman D (2004) Effects of fire history on the structure and floristic composition of woody vegetation around Kalumburu, North Kimberley, Australia: a landscape-scale natural experiment. Australian Journal of Botany 52, 381–404. 
   

Walsh RPD, Lawler DM (1981) Rainfall seasonality: description, spatial patterns and change through time. Weather 36, 201–208. 
 

Walter H (1973) ‘Vegetation of the earth in relation to climate and the eco-physiological conditions.’ (Springer-Verlag: New York) 

Werner PA, Murphy PG (2001) Size-specific biomass allocation and water content of above-and below-ground components of three Eucalyptus species in a northern Australian savanna. Australian Journal of Botany 49, 155–167. 
   

Williams RJ, Duff G, Bowman DMJS, Cook GD (1996) Variation in the composition and structure of tropical savannas as a function of rainfall and soil texture along a large-scale climatic gradient in the Northern Territory, Australia. Journal of Biogeography 23, 747–756. 
 

Williams RJ, Myers BA, Muller WJ, Duff GA, Eamus D (1997) Leaf phenology of woody species in a north Australian tropical savanna. Ecology 78, 2542–2558. 
 

Williams RJ, Cook GD, Gill AM, Moore PHR (1999) Fire regime, fire intensity and tree survival in a tropical savanna in northern Australia. Australian Journal of Ecology 24, 50–59. 
   

Wilson BA, Bowman DMJS (1994) Factors influencing tree growth in tropical savanna: studies of an abrupt Eucalyptus boundary at Yapilika, Melville Island, northern Australia. Journal of Tropical Ecology 10, 103–120. 
 

Woinarski JCZ, Recher HF, Majer JD (1997) Vertebrates of eucalypt formations. In ‘Eucalypt ecology. Individuals to ecosystems’. pp. 303–341. (Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, UK) 

Wright IJ, Reich PB, Westoby M, Ackerly DD, Baruch Z, Bongers F, Cavender-Bares J, Chapin T, Cornelissen JHC, Diemer M, Flexas J, Garnier E, Groom PK, Gulias J, Hikosaka K, Lamont BB, Lee T, Lee W, Lusk C, Midgley JJ, Navas ML, Niinemets U, Oleksyn J, Osada N, Poorter H, Poot P, Prior L, Pyankov VI, Roumet C, Thomas SC, Tjoelker MG, Veneklaas EJ, Villar R (2004) The worldwide leaf economics spectrum. Nature 428, 821–827. 
  

Young ARM (1996) ‘Environmental change in Australia since 1788.’ (Oxford University Press: Melbourne) 









" name="eprints.referencetext" />
<meta content="Bowman, David M.J.S. and Prior, L.D. (2005) Turner Review No. 10 Why do evergreen trees dominate the Australian seasonal tropics? Australian Journal of Botany, 53 (5). pp. 379-399. ISSN 0067-1924" name="eprints.citation" />
<meta content="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/2424/1/Bowman_Prior_-_Evergreen_Tropics.pdf" name="eprints.document_url" />
<link rel="schema.DC" href="http://purl.org/DC/elements/1.0/" />
<meta content="Turner Review No. 10 Why do evergreen trees dominate the Australian seasonal tropics?
" name="DC.title" />
<meta content="Bowman, David M.J.S." name="DC.creator" />
<meta content="Prior, L.D." name="DC.creator" />
<meta content="270402 Plant Physiology" name="DC.subject" />
<meta content="270400 Botany" name="DC.subject" />
<meta content="270000 Biological Sciences" name="DC.subject" />
<meta content="The northern Australian woody vegetation is predominantly evergreen despite an intensely seasonal climate and a diversity of deciduous species in the regional flora. From a global climatic perspective the dominance of evergreen rather than deciduous trees in the Australian savannas is apparently anomalous when compared with other savannas of the world. However, this pattern is not unexpected in light of existing theory that emphasises photosynthetic return relative to cost of investment between deciduous and evergreen species. (a) Climatically, monsoonal Australia is more extreme in terms of rainfall seasonality and variability and high air temperatures than most other parts of the seasonally dry tropics. Existing theory predicts that extreme variability and high temperatures favour evergreen trees that can maximise the period during which leaves assimilate CO2. (b) Soil infertility is known to favour evergreens, given the physiological cost of leaf construction, and the northern Australian vegetation grows mainly on deeply weathered and infertile Tertiary regoliths. (c) These regoliths also provide stores of ground water that evergreens are able to exploit during seasonal drought, thereby maintaining near constant transpiration throughout the year. (d) Fire disturbance appears to be an important secondary factor in explaining the dominance of evergreens in the monsoon tropics, based on the fact that most deciduous tree species of the region are restricted to small fire-protected sites. (e) Evolutionary history cannot explain the predominance of evergreens, given the existence of a wide range of deciduous species, including deciduous eucalypts, in the regional tree flora." name="DC.description" />
<meta content="2005" name="DC.date" />
<meta content="Article" name="DC.type" />
<meta content="PeerReviewed" name="DC.type" />
<meta content="application/pdf" name="DC.format" />
<meta content="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/2424/1/Bowman_Prior_-_Evergreen_Tropics.pdf" name="DC.identifier" />
<meta content="http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/BT05022" name="DC.relation" />
<meta content="Bowman, David M.J.S. and Prior, L.D. (2005) Turner Review No. 10 Why do evergreen trees dominate the Australian seasonal tropics? Australian Journal of Botany, 53 (5). pp. 379-399. ISSN 0067-1924" name="DC.identifier" />
<meta content="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/2424/" name="DC.relation" />
<link rel="alternate" href="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/cgi/export/2424/BibTeX/epprod-eprint-2424.bib" title="BibTeX" type="text/plain" />
<link rel="alternate" href="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/cgi/export/2424/ContextObject/epprod-eprint-2424.xml" title="OpenURL ContextObject" type="text/xml" />
<link rel="alternate" href="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/cgi/export/2424/ContextObject::Dissertation/epprod-eprint-2424.xml" title="OpenURL Dissertation" type="text/xml" />
<link rel="alternate" href="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/cgi/export/2424/ContextObject::Journal/epprod-eprint-2424.xml" title="OpenURL Journal" type="text/xml" />
<link rel="alternate" href="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/cgi/export/2424/DC/epprod-eprint-2424.txt" title="Dublin Core" type="text/plain" />
<link rel="alternate" href="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/cgi/export/2424/DIDL/epprod-eprint-2424.xml" title="DIDL" type="text/xml" />
<link rel="alternate" href="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/cgi/export/2424/EndNote/epprod-eprint-2424.enw" title="EndNote" type="text/plain" />
<link rel="alternate" href="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/cgi/export/2424/HTML/epprod-eprint-2424.html" title="HTML Citation" type="text/html; charset=utf-8" />
<link rel="alternate" href="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/cgi/export/2424/METS/epprod-eprint-2424.xml" title="METS" type="text/xml" />
<link rel="alternate" href="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/cgi/export/2424/MODS/epprod-eprint-2424.xml" title="MODS" type="text/xml" />
<link rel="alternate" href="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/cgi/export/2424/RIS/epprod-eprint-2424.ris" title="Reference Manager" type="text/plain" />
<link rel="alternate" href="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/cgi/export/2424/Refer/epprod-eprint-2424.refer" title="Refer" type="text/plain" />
<link rel="alternate" href="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/cgi/export/2424/Simple/epprod-eprint-2424text" title="Simple Metadata" type="text/plain" />
<link rel="alternate" href="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/cgi/export/2424/Text/epprod-eprint-2424.txt" title="ASCII Citation" type="text/plain; charset=utf-8" />
<link rel="alternate" href="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/cgi/export/2424/XML/epprod-eprint-2424.xml" title="EP3 XML" type="text/xml" />

  </head>
  <body bgcolor="#ffffff" text="#000000" onLoad="loadRoutine(); MM_preloadImages('images/eprints/ePrints_banner_r5_c5_f2.gif','images/eprints/ePrints_banner_r5_c7_f2.gif','images/eprints/ePrints_banner_r5_c8_f2.gif','images/eprints/ePrints_banner_r5_c9_f2.gif','images/eprints/ePrints_banner_r5_c10_f2.gif','images/eprints/ePrints_banner_r5_c11_f2.gif','images/eprints/ePrints_banner_r6_c4_f2.gif')">
    
    <div class="ep_noprint"><noscript><style type="text/css">@import url(http://eprints.utas.edu.au/style/nojs.css);</style></noscript></div>




<table width="795" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0">
  <tr>
    <td><script language="JavaScript1.2">mmLoadMenus();</script>
      <table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="795">
        <!-- fwtable fwsrc="eprints_banner_final2.png" fwbase="ePrints_banner.gif" fwstyle="Dreamweaver" fwdocid = "1249563342" fwnested="0" -->
        <tr>
          <td><img src="/images/eprints/spacer.gif" width="32" height="1" border="0" alt="" /></td>
          <td><img src="/images/eprints/spacer.gif" width="104" height="1" border="0" alt="" /></td>
          <td><img src="/images/eprints/spacer.gif" width="44" height="1" border="0" alt="" /></td>
          <td><img src="/images/eprints/spacer.gif" width="105" height="1" border="0" alt="" /></td>
          <td><img src="/images/eprints/spacer.gif" width="41" height="1" border="0" alt="" /></td>
          <td><img src="/images/eprints/spacer.gif" width="16" height="1" border="0" alt="" /></td>
          <td><img src="/images/eprints/spacer.gif" width="68" height="1" border="0" alt="" /></td>
          <td><img src="/images/eprints/spacer.gif" width="68" height="1" border="0" alt="" /></td>
          <td><img src="/images/eprints/spacer.gif" width="68" height="1" border="0" alt="" /></td>
          <td><img src="/images/eprints/spacer.gif" width="82" height="1" border="0" alt="" /></td>
          <td><img src="/images/eprints/spacer.gif" width="69" height="1" border="0" alt="" /></td>
          <td><img src="/images/eprints/spacer.gif" width="98" height="1" border="0" alt="" /></td>
          <td><img src="/images/eprints/spacer.gif" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" /></td>
        </tr>
        <tr>
          <td colspan="12"><img name="ePrints_banner_r1_c1" src="/images/eprints/ePrints_banner_r1_c1.gif" width="795" height="10" border="0" alt="" /></td>
          <td><img src="/images/eprints/spacer.gif" width="1" height="10" border="0" alt="" /></td>
        </tr>
        <tr>
          <td rowspan="6"><img name="ePrints_banner_r2_c1" src="/images/eprints/ePrints_banner_r2_c1.gif" width="32" height="118" border="0" alt="" /></td>
          <td rowspan="5"><a href="http://www.utas.edu.au/"><img name="ePrints_banner_r2_c2" src="/images/eprints/ePrints_banner_r2_c2.gif" width="104" height="103" border="0" alt="" /></a></td>
          <td colspan="10"><img name="ePrints_banner_r2_c3" src="/images/eprints/ePrints_banner_r2_c3.gif" width="659" height="41" border="0" alt="" /></td>
          <td><img src="/images/eprints/spacer.gif" width="1" height="41" border="0" alt="" /></td>
        </tr>
        <tr>
          <td colspan="3"><a href="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/"><img name="ePrints_banner_r3_c3" src="/images/eprints/ePrints_banner_r3_c3.gif" width="190" height="31" border="0" alt="" /></a></td>
          <td rowspan="2" colspan="7"><img name="ePrints_banner_r3_c6" src="/images/eprints/ePrints_banner_r3_c6.gif" width="469" height="37" border="0" alt="" /></td>
          <td><img src="/images/eprints/spacer.gif" width="1" height="31" border="0" alt="" /></td>
        </tr>
        <tr>
          <td colspan="3"><img name="ePrints_banner_r4_c3" src="/images/eprints/ePrints_banner_r4_c3.gif" width="190" height="6" border="0" alt="" /></td>
          <td><img src="/images/eprints/spacer.gif" width="1" height="6" border="0" alt="" /></td>
        </tr>
        <tr>
          <td colspan="2"><img name="ePrints_banner_r5_c3" src="/images/eprints/ePrints_banner_r5_c3.gif" width="149" height="1" border="0" alt="" /></td>
          <td rowspan="2" colspan="2"><a href="/information.html" onMouseOut="MM_swapImgRestore();MM_startTimeout()" onMouseOver="MM_showMenu(window.mm_menu_0821132634_0,0,25,null,'ePrints_banner_r5_c5');MM_swapImage('ePrints_banner_r5_c5','','/images/eprints/ePrints_banner_r5_c5_f2.gif',1);"><img name="ePrints_banner_r5_c5" src="/images/eprints/ePrints_banner_r5_c5.gif" width="57" height="25" border="0" alt="About" /></a></td>
          <td rowspan="2"><a href="/view/" onMouseOut="MM_swapImgRestore();MM_startTimeout()" onMouseOver="MM_showMenu(window.mm_menu_0821133021_1,0,25,null,'ePrints_banner_r5_c7');MM_swapImage('ePrints_banner_r5_c7','','/images/eprints/ePrints_banner_r5_c7_f2.gif',1);"><img name="ePrints_banner_r5_c7" src="/images/eprints/ePrints_banner_r5_c7.gif" width="68" height="25" border="0" alt="Browse" /></a></td>
          <td rowspan="2"><a href="/perl/search/simple" onMouseOut="MM_swapImgRestore();MM_startTimeout()" onMouseOver="MM_showMenu(window.mm_menu_0821133201_2,0,25,null,'ePrints_banner_r5_c8');MM_swapImage('ePrints_banner_r5_c8','','/images/eprints/ePrints_banner_r5_c8_f2.gif',1);"><img name="ePrints_banner_r5_c8" src="/images/eprints/ePrints_banner_r5_c8.gif" width="68" height="25" border="0" alt="Search" /></a></td>
          <td rowspan="2"><a href="/perl/register" onMouseOut="MM_swapImgRestore();MM_startTimeout();" onMouseOver="MM_showMenu(window.mm_menu_1018171924_3,0,25,null,'ePrints_banner_r5_c9');MM_swapImage('ePrints_banner_r5_c9','','/images/eprints/ePrints_banner_r5_c9_f2.gif',1);"><img name="ePrints_banner_r5_c9" src="/images/eprints/ePrints_banner_r5_c9.gif" width="68" height="25" border="0" alt="register" /></a></td>
          <td rowspan="2"><a href="/perl/users/home" onMouseOut="MM_swapImgRestore();MM_startTimeout()" onMouseOver="MM_showMenu(window.mm_menu_0821133422_4,0,25,null,'ePrints_banner_r5_c10');MM_swapImage('ePrints_banner_r5_c10','','/images/eprints/ePrints_banner_r5_c10_f2.gif',1);"><img name="ePrints_banner_r5_c10" src="/images/eprints/ePrints_banner_r5_c10.gif" width="82" height="25" border="0" alt="user area" /></a></td>
          <td rowspan="2"><a href="/help/" onMouseOut="MM_swapImgRestore();MM_startTimeout()" onMouseOver="MM_showMenu(window.mm_menu_0821133514_5,0,25,null,'ePrints_banner_r5_c11');MM_swapImage('ePrints_banner_r5_c11','','/images/eprints/ePrints_banner_r5_c11_f2.gif',1);"><img name="ePrints_banner_r5_c11" src="/images/eprints/ePrints_banner_r5_c11.gif" width="69" height="25" border="0" alt="Help" /></a></td>
          <td rowspan="3" colspan="4"><img name="ePrints_banner_r5_c12" src="/images/eprints/ePrints_banner_r5_c12.gif" width="98" height="40" border="0" alt="" /></td>
          <td><img src="/images/eprints/spacer.gif" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" /></td>
        </tr>
        <tr>
          <td rowspan="2"><img name="ePrints_banner_r6_c3" src="/images/eprints/ePrints_banner_r6_c3.gif" width="44" height="39" border="0" alt="ePrints home" /></td>
          <td><a href="/" onMouseOut="MM_swapImgRestore()" onMouseOver="MM_swapImage('ePrints_banner_r6_c4','','/images/eprints/ePrints_banner_r6_c4_f2.gif',1);"><img name="ePrints_banner_r6_c4" src="/images/eprints/ePrints_banner_r6_c4.gif" width="105" height="24" border="0" alt="ePrints home" /></a></td>
          <td><img src="/images/eprints/spacer.gif" width="1" height="24" border="0" alt="" /></td>
        </tr>
        <tr>
          <td><img name="ePrints_banner_r7_c2" src="/images/eprints/ePrints_banner_r7_c2.gif" width="104" height="15" border="0" alt="" /></td>
          <td colspan="8"><img name="ePrints_banner_r7_c4" src="/images/eprints/ePrints_banner_r7_c4.gif" width="517" height="15" border="0" alt="" /></td>
          <td><img src="/images/eprints/spacer.gif" width="1" height="15" border="0" alt="" /></td>
        </tr>
      </table></td>
  </tr>
    <tr><td><table width="100%" style="font-size: 90%; border: solid 1px #ccc; padding: 3px"><tr>
      <td align="left"><a href="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/cgi/users/home">Login</a> | <a href="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/cgi/register">Create Account</a></td>
      <td align="right" style="white-space: nowrap">
        <form method="get" accept-charset="utf-8" action="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/cgi/search" style="display:inline">
          <input class="ep_tm_searchbarbox" size="20" type="text" name="q" />
          <input class="ep_tm_searchbarbutton" value="Search" type="submit" name="_action_search" />
          <input type="hidden" name="_order" value="bytitle" />
          <input type="hidden" name="basic_srchtype" value="ALL" />
          <input type="hidden" name="_satisfyall" value="ALL" />
        </form>
      </td>
    </tr></table></td></tr>
  <tr>
    <td class="toplinks"><!-- InstanceBeginEditable name="content" -->


<div align="center">
  
  <table width="720" class="ep_tm_main"><tr><td align="left">
    <h1 class="ep_tm_pagetitle">Turner Review No. 10 Why do evergreen trees dominate the Australian seasonal tropics?</h1>
    <p style="margin-bottom: 1em" class="not_ep_block"><span class="person_name">Bowman, David M.J.S.</span> and <span class="person_name">Prior, L.D.</span> (2005) <xhtml:em>Turner Review No. 10 Why do evergreen trees dominate the Australian seasonal tropics?</xhtml:em> Australian Journal of Botany, 53 (5). pp. 379-399. ISSN 0067-1924</p><p style="margin-bottom: 1em" class="not_ep_block"></p><table style="margin-bottom: 1em" class="not_ep_block"><tr><td valign="top" style="text-align:center"><a href="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/2424/1/Bowman_Prior_-_Evergreen_Tropics.pdf"><img alt="[img]" src="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/style/images/fileicons/application_pdf.png" class="ep_doc_icon" border="0" /></a></td><td valign="top"><a href="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/2424/1/Bowman_Prior_-_Evergreen_Tropics.pdf"><span class="ep_document_citation">PDF</span></a> - Full text restricted - Requires a PDF viewer<br />754Kb</td><td><form method="get" accept-charset="utf-8" action="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/cgi/request_doc"><input accept-charset="utf-8" value="3131" name="docid" type="hidden" /><div class=""><input value="Request a copy" name="_action_null" class="ep_form_action_button" onclick="return EPJS_button_pushed( '_action_null' )" type="submit" /> </div></form></td></tr></table><p style="margin-bottom: 1em" class="not_ep_block">Official URL: <a href="http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/BT05022">http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/BT05022</a></p><div class="not_ep_block"><h2>Abstract</h2><p style="padding-bottom: 16px; text-align: left; margin: 1em auto 0em auto">The northern Australian woody vegetation is predominantly evergreen despite an intensely seasonal climate and a diversity of deciduous species in the regional flora. From a global climatic perspective the dominance of evergreen rather than deciduous trees in the Australian savannas is apparently anomalous when compared with other savannas of the world. However, this pattern is not unexpected in light of existing theory that emphasises photosynthetic return relative to cost of investment between deciduous and evergreen species. (a) Climatically, monsoonal Australia is more extreme in terms of rainfall seasonality and variability and high air temperatures than most other parts of the seasonally dry tropics. Existing theory predicts that extreme variability and high temperatures favour evergreen trees that can maximise the period during which leaves assimilate CO2. (b) Soil infertility is known to favour evergreens, given the physiological cost of leaf construction, and the northern Australian vegetation grows mainly on deeply weathered and infertile Tertiary regoliths. (c) These regoliths also provide stores of ground water that evergreens are able to exploit during seasonal drought, thereby maintaining near constant transpiration throughout the year. (d) Fire disturbance appears to be an important secondary factor in explaining the dominance of evergreens in the monsoon tropics, based on the fact that most deciduous tree species of the region are restricted to small fire-protected sites. (e) Evolutionary history cannot explain the predominance of evergreens, given the existence of a wide range of deciduous species, including deciduous eucalypts, in the regional tree flora.</p></div><table style="margin-bottom: 1em" cellpadding="3" class="not_ep_block" border="0"><tr><th valign="top" class="ep_row">Item Type:</th><td valign="top" class="ep_row">Article</td></tr><tr><th valign="top" class="ep_row">Subjects:</th><td valign="top" class="ep_row"><a href="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/view/subjects/270402.html">270000 Biological Sciences &gt; 270400 Botany &gt; 270402 Plant Physiology</a><br /><a href="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/view/subjects/270400.html">270000 Biological Sciences &gt; 270400 Botany</a><br /><a href="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/view/subjects/270000.html">270000 Biological Sciences</a></td></tr><tr><th valign="top" class="ep_row">Collections:</th><td valign="top" class="ep_row">UNSPECIFIED</td></tr><tr><th valign="top" class="ep_row">ID Code:</th><td valign="top" class="ep_row">2424</td></tr><tr><th valign="top" class="ep_row">Deposited By:</th><td valign="top" class="ep_row"><span class="ep_name_citation"><span class="person_name">Scholarly Publications Librarian</span></span></td></tr><tr><th valign="top" class="ep_row">Deposited On:</th><td valign="top" class="ep_row">12 Nov 2007 09:16</td></tr><tr><th valign="top" class="ep_row">Last Modified:</th><td valign="top" class="ep_row">11 Feb 2008 11:15</td></tr><tr><th valign="top" class="ep_row">ePrint Statistics:</th><td valign="top" class="ep_row"><a target="ePrintStats" href="/es/index.php?action=show_detail_eprint;id=2424;">View statistics for this ePrint</a></td></tr></table><p align="right">Repository Staff Only: <a href="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/cgi/users/home?screen=EPrint::View&amp;eprintid=2424">item control page</a></p>
  </td></tr></table>
</div>



    <!-- InstanceEndEditable --></td>
  </tr>
  <tr>
    <td><!-- #BeginLibraryItem "/Library/footer_eprints.lbi" -->
    <table width="795" border="0" align="left" cellpadding="0" class="footer">
  <tr valign="top">
<td colspan="2"><div align="center"><a href="http://www.utas.edu.au">UTAS home</a> | <a href="http://www.utas.edu.au/library/">Library home</a> | <a href="/">ePrints home</a> | <a href="/contact.html">contact</a> | <a href="/information.html">about</a> | <a href="/view/">browse</a> | <a href="/perl/search/simple">search</a> | <a href="/perl/register">register</a> | <a href="/perl/users/home">user area</a> | <a href="/help/">help</a></div><br /></td>
</tr>
<tr><td colspan="2"><p><img src="/images/eprints/footerline.gif" width="100%" height="4" /></p></td></tr>
      <tr valign="top">
        <td width="68%" class="footer">Authorised by the University Librarian<br />
© University of Tasmania ABN 30 764 374 782<br />
      <a href="http://www.utas.edu.au/cricos/">CRICOS Provider Code 00586B</a> | <a href="http://www.utas.edu.au/copyright/copyright_disclaimers.html">Copyright &amp; Disclaimers</a> | <a href="http://www.utas.edu.au/accessibility/index.html">Accessibility</a> | <a href="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/feedback/">Site Feedback</a>  </td>
        <td width="32%"><div align="right">
            <p align="right" class="NoPrint"><a href="http://www.utas.edu.au/"><img src="http://www.utas.edu.au/shared/logos/unioftasstrip.gif" alt="University of Tasmania Home Page" width="260" height="16" border="0" align="right" /></a></p>
            <p align="right" class="NoPrint"><a href="http://www.utas.edu.au/"><br />
            </a></p>
        </div></td>
      </tr>
      <tr valign="top">
        <td><p>  </p></td>
        <td><div align="right"><span class="NoPrint"><a href="http://www.eprints.org/software/"><img src="/images/eprintslogo.gif" alt="ePrints logo" width="77" height="29" border="0" align="bottom" /></a></span></div></td>
      </tr>
    </table>
    <!-- #EndLibraryItem -->
    <div align="center"></div></td>
  </tr>
</table>

  </body>
</html>