- Mallees occur naturally over an extensive area of southern Australia including the low to mid rainfall agricultural regions.
- Mallees are long lived. In areas where native mallee species have been utilised for over 100 years for the production of eucalypt oil, they survive despite a 2-3 year harvesting cycle.
- The Mallee’s large lignotuber (underground stem) provides an underground carbon sink and latent buds that will rapidly sprout if the ground stem is destroyed i.e. by fire.
- Mallee root zones extend 20 to 30 metres below ground level to tap into groundwater during drought.
- Mallees grow in infertile soils, survive in extreme climate conditions and are resistant to insect and plant pathogens.
- The high oil content of the leaves makes Mallees unpalatable to introduced stock thus minimising impacts of post-establishment grazing.
CO2 Web site
Sounds like a pretty resiliant tree to me. Some good rains now and 11% rise in sp Friday with good volume. Just what I like to see.
- Mallees occur naturally over an extensive area of southern...
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