Home > ASBS > Newsletter

The ASBS logo features Xanthorrhea (a Grass Tree)
green line

Austral. Syst. Bot. Soc. Newsletter

Number 131-132, June-September 2007

Contents

green line

From the President ................ 1
ASBS Inc. business
    New members ................ 1
    Hansjoerg Eichler Scientific Research Fund applications ................1
Articles
    Advice to emigrating gardeners – an 1840 letter from Australia ................ 2
    2008 National ConferenceAdelaidePreliminary announcement and registration of interest................3
    James Drummond’s date and place of birth ................ 4
    A different slant on native species: invasive native plants causing problems in New South Wales .........4
Thesis abstract
    Phylogeny of Juncaceae Juss., and species limits and natural hybridisation in Australasian Juncus L. section Juncotypus Dumort .......5
Obituary
    Edward W. Cross, botanist (1977–2007) ................ 6
Deaths
    George Seddon (1927–2007) ................ 8
    Verne Grant (1917–2007) ................ 8
Food for thought
    Tackling work issues ................ 9
News
    Plant systematics in Adelaide ................ 10
    New journal Charophytes ................ 10
    Steve Hopper promotes systematics in Science ................ 11
    Closure of the ABC Natural History Unit ................ 11
    Moves from Canberra ................ 11
CHAH Inc. report
    Resources of Australian Herbaria – update ................ 11
Miscellanea
    Changes to some Canberra email addresses ................ 11
    Banksias in medieval England ................ 11
Employment and funding opportunities
    Job opportunity, Cairns ................ 12
    Funding opportunity: Network for Vegetation Function ................ 12
    Volunteer opportunity at University of the Third Age ................ 12
ABRS report
    New push for Australian taxonomy ................ 13
ABLO report ................ 14
    Tentative herbarium destinations for the 2007–2008 ABLO, Jeremy Bruhl ................ 19
Book reviews
    Flora of Australia volume 2 ................ 20
    North-east Australian ‘Blue-greens’ (Cyanoprokaryota) ................. 22
    Name that slime ................ 24
    The discovery, science and culture of Sturt pea ................ 25
    The introductory volume of Australia’s algal Flora ................ 27
Book notices
    New State censuses: Tasmania, Northern Territory, Victoria, Queensland ................ 29
    The Burke & Wills expedition ................ 29
    Aboriginal people and their plants ................ 30
    Plant conservation in Japan ................ 31
    New and updated issue of Heywood’s Flowering Plants of the World ................ 31
    New edition of Western Weeds ................ 32
    The coastal discovery of Australia ................ 32
    Valuing Australia’s northern savanna ................ 32
Websites of interest
    1788–90 images of Australian plants ................ 33
    Accessing Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia ................ 33
    Photosynthesis – creating multidimensional images ................ 33
    Barcoding ................ 33
    Encyclopaedia of Life ................ 33
From TAXACOM
    New online journal using video technology to improve often-used techniques ................ 34
    2008 Rupert Barneby Award ................ 34
    Biodiversity Heritage Library ................ 34
    TED: spreading ideas ................ 34
    Being green ................ 34
    Getting a feel for the Lucid 3 tool ................ 34
    Augustin-Pyramus De Candolle Prize ................ 35
    EDIT’s School of European Taxonomy looking for trainers ................ 35
    A new role for Scratchpads ................ 35
    Examples of new technology in species web pages ................ 36
    Which printer ink for labels? ................ 36
    ScienceAlert a new website promoting Australian science ................ 36
From EnviroWeeds
    Gamba grass fuelling fiery debate ................ 37
    Weed threat to biodiversity being ignored ................ 37
    How sterile is sterile? ................ 37
    Australia’s glyphosate-resistant weeds ................ 37
    New photogallery of weed infestations ................ 38
    Mistletoes and biodiversity ................ 38
    Weedy species being pushed as Biofuels ................ 38
    Weeds and climate change ................ 38
    A warning to gardeners on weeds and their sale on the internet ................ 38

 

View PDF for this Newsletter (1,352 KB)


Return to the
Australian Systematic Botany Society Home Page


Updated 11 October, 2007 , (Murray Fagg)

Australia map