Recovery of native plant communities following control of Terracina Spurge (Euphorbia terracina): Three case studies from south-west Western Australia

Terracina spurge or Geraldton carnation weed (Euphorbia terracina) is an invasive weed that impacts native plant communities across southern mainland Australia and in the United States (USA), including southern California and Pennsylvania. There are, however, few published accounts of appropriate control techniques or recovery of native vegetation following removal of this species. We report here on the results of three adaptive management projects investigating effective control of Terracina Spurge and subsequent recovery of Banksia woodlands, coastal shrublands, and sedgeland communities in the Swan Coastal Plain bioregion, south-west Western Australia.

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Kate Brown (2017). Recovery of native plant communities following control of Terracina Spurge (Euphorbia terracina): Three case studies from south-west Western Australia [Data set]. Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions. https://doi.org/10.82800/erv2843b

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Author Kate Brown
Author Email Kate Brown
Maintainer Kate Brown
Maintainer Email Kate Brown
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Published on 2014-03-01
Data last updated on 2017-01-25
Update Frequency infrequently
Temporal coverage from 2005-07-01
Temporal coverage to 2010-07-01
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