Native plants
CSIRO uses traditional and molecular methods to better understand the variety and needs of Australia’s native plants.
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27 March 2008 | Updated 14 October 2011
Native plant research
CSIRO studies Australian native plants to better understand their:
The expertise we gain from our research helps us to tailor effective and efficient conservation methods to:
Classifying native plants
Characterising and understanding diversity in the groups, distribution and relationships of Australian plants is essential to conserve and manage biodiversity.
Having a reliable system to identify plants is important so that we can better:
CSIRO's research provides the latest, and sometimes only, revisions of the classification for many Australian plants.
Using information from both traditional and modern techniques, these revisions help us predict how plant relationships may have evolved.
We are clarifying relationships between plant groups by determining their boundaries and determining where plants belong in the classification system.
This research allows us to better understand, and therefore better manage and conserve, Australia's unique biodiversity.
Evolutionary history
To understand how we can best manage and sustain our use of Australia's native biodiversity, it is critical that we understand
By better understanding evolution, we can:
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identify and use native relatives of Australian crops with useful agronomic traits
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manage catchment systems
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control weeds
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monitor the effects of introduced species
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rehabilitate the Australian landscape with native plants.
Interactive plant identification keys
Using the expertise gained through taxonomic and phylogenetic research, CSIRO has produced interactive computer-based keys to identify several groups of Australian plants.
These keys are designed for use by:
Currently available are:
We are also developing other keys including:
Related information sheets
Related scientific papers
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