October 17, 2007

Wollemi Pines Under Threat of Global Warming?

Such is the expressed concern of National Tree Day founder John Dee. However, it is unclear whether the electrified plantation of 120 new seedlings will ensure the survival of the species from the ravages of changing climate.

Perhaps some comfort can be taken from the species' 200-million-year evolutionary history, as interglacial warming periods have occurred throughout this lengthy period of survival.

In an ABC News article, a surprising report describes the location of the Wollemi Pines, which was found in 1994 in the Wollemi National Park, as secret and suggests that poaching and feral animals are threats from which the new seedlings will be protected through an electrified fence.

The public, however, should be able to visit this plantation, which was established to try and replicate the original colony as closely as possible.

Posted by neil at 06:51 AM | Comments (14) | TrackBack

September 07, 2007

Prue's Unidentified Anomoly

In the year 2000 I posted an image on wikipedia of a growth that I found on a Ryparosa javanica hoping to get it identified.

Seven years older, but no wiser, I thought it worth giving it another shot.

I think it's part of the growth of the tree. The stem looks similar, but it is not the normal fruiting body and with hundreds of trees to look at daily, I have not seen it again.

I am asking Neil, most humbly, if he will post my image on the blog, since I remain unempowered in the blogging process.

Ryparosa Growth.jpg

Posted by neil at 10:24 PM | Comments (4) | TrackBack

Something Rotten in the Daintree

Ryparosa2.jpg

Step into the rainforests of the Daintree lowlands at the moment and you’re likely to whiff the pervasive scent of the rare Javan Ash (Ryparosa javanica). The abundant flowering emits a sweet, slightly off-smell, like five-day-old socks or raw hamburger mince.

The Javan Ash is found in both Java and Australia. This forms evidence of the mixing of the continental biota of the Australian and Asian plates, which are believed to have collided about fifteen million years ago, in the vicinity of what is now the Timor region.

As a defence against herbivores, these plants emit the poisonous gas Hydrogen Cyanide (HCN), through a process called ‘cyanogenesis’.

HCN is poisonous, not only to animals that the eat plants, but to the plants themselves. To prevent poisoning themselves, the plants limit the production of HCN through the strategic storage of both cyanogenic glycosides and an enzyme in adjacent vacuoles of the cell. When the cell is damaged the compartment walls are breached and the reaction takes place. In this way, HCN is produced only when needed.

Posted by neil at 12:54 PM | Comments (8) | TrackBack