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  1. The Flora Tasmaniae is a description of the plants discovered in Tasmania during the Ross expedition written by Joseph Dalton Hooker and published by Reeve Brothers in London between 1855 and 1860. Hooker sailed on HMS Erebus as assistant surgeon.

  2. This Flora is a work in progress and is intended to be updated regularly. It aims to eventually describe the approximately 3000 plants that grow wild in Tasmania (not including non-vascular plants such as mosses, liverworts and algae).

  3. Flora of Tasmania. For such a tiny island state, the diversity of Tasmania's vegetation is astounding - mosaics of alpine herb fields and colourful heathland, ancient rainforests, tracts of native grasslands and dry windswept coastal vegetation.

  4. These include Tasmania’s only deciduous tree or shrub, the myrtle beech, and certain cushion plants. Rainforests would be more widespread in the absence of fires, most of which are caused by natural forces. There are softwood plantations in the Fingal and Scottsdale areas and inland from the northwest coast.

  5. 17 de nov. de 2023 · Having the Flora of Tasmania available online allows the content to be updated as new research becomes available, providing up to date scientific information on Tasmanian plants. The site is intended for use by professional botanists and people with a specialist or working knowledge of botany and botanical terms.

  6. All about Tasmanian Native Flora. Tasmania has a wonderful range of natural flora. Much of it is common to some of the other Australian states, typically South Australia, Victoria and New South Wales however Tasmania has a great number of endemic species.

  7. The Flora of Tasmania Online is a publicly available resource for the dissemination of taxonomic information relating to the flora of the State of Tasmania. Currently the focus will be on the Angiosperms (flowering plants). The Flora contains keys, descriptions, distributional and habitat data etc for all taxa with appropriate referencing.