This species is usually known as: |
Kunzea pulchella |
This species has also been known as: |
Kunzea sericea, Kunzea sericea var. albiflora, Kunzea sericea var. glabrata, Salisia pulchella |
Common names: |
Granite Kunzea |
Trends (five
databases) 1901-2013:
[Number
of papers mentioning Kunzea pulchella: 2]
|
Popularity of Kunzea pulchella over time
[Left-hand
Plot: Plot of numbers of papers mentioning Kunzea pulchella (histogram and left
hand axis scale of left-hand plot) and line of best fit, 1901 to 2013 (equation
and % variation accounted for in box); Right-hand Plot: Plot of a
proportional micro index, derived from numbers of papers mentioning Kunzea
pulchella
as a proportion (scaled by multiplying by one million) of the approximate total
number of papers available in databases for that year (frequency polygon and
left-hand axis scale of right-hand plot) and line of best fit, 1901 to 2013
(equation and % variation accounted for in box)]
Keywords
[Total number of keywords included in the papers that mentioned this species: 18]
Agonis obtusissima (1), Eremaea pauciflora (1), Eucalyptus erythrocorys (1), Eucalyptus stoatei (1), GC–MS (1), geranic acid (1), globulol (1), honey bee (1), Kunzea pulchella (1), leaf essential oil composition (1), Malleostemon tuberculatus (1), Melaleuca uncinata (1), Myrtaceae (1), population dynamics (1), rock crevice (1), threatened species (1), Thryptomene australis (1), Thryptomene kochii (1)
Most likely scope for
crop use/product (%):
[Please
note: When there are only a few papers mentioning a species, care should be
taken with the interpretation of these crop use/product results; as well, a
mention may relate to the use of a species, or the context in which it grows,
rather than a product]
honey (66.15), breeding (22.34), essential oil (5.18), ornamental (0.92), medicinal (0.69), timber (0.63), fruit (0.50), poison (0.50), weed (0.38), starch (0.23)…..
Recent mentions of
this species in the literature:
[since 2012, with links to abstracts; The references from 1901-2013 which have
been used for the trend, keyword and crop use/product analyses below, are
listed below these references]
Llorens TM, Tapper S-L, Coates DJ, McArthur S, Hankinson M and Byrne M (2016) Does population distribution matter? Influence of a patchy versus continuous distribution on genetic patterns in a wind-pollinated shrub. Journal of Biogeography, n/a-n/a. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jbi.12843
Rix MG, Edwards DL, Byrne M, Harvey MS, Joseph L and Roberts JD (2015) Biogeography and speciation of terrestrial fauna in the south-western Australian biodiversity hotspot. Biological Reviews 90, 762-793. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/brv.12132
Tapper SL, Byrne M, Yates CJ, Keppel G, Hopper SD, Van Niel K, Schut AGT, Mucina L and Wardell-Johnson GW (2014) Isolated with persistence or dynamically connected? Genetic patterns in a common granite outcrop endemic. Diversity and Distributions 20, 987-1001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ddi.12185
Tapper S-L, Byrne M, Yates CJ, Keppel G, Hopper SD, Van Niel K, Schut AGT, Mucina L and Wardell-Johnson GW (2014) Prolonged isolation and persistence of a common endemic on granite outcrops in both mesic and semi-arid environments in south-western Australia. Journal of Biogeography 41, 2032-2044. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jbi.12343
Vartia S, Collins PC, Cross TF, Fitzgerald RD, Gauthier DT, McGinnity P, Mirimin L and Carlsson J (2014) Multiplexing with three-primer PCR for rapid and economical microsatellite validation. Hereditas 151, 43-54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/hrd2.00044
References 1901-2013 (and
links to abstracts):
[Number
of papers mentioning Kunzea pulchella: 2; Any undated papers have been included
at the end]
Lassak EV and Brophy JJ (2004) Steam volatile leaf oils of some Western Australian species of the family Myrtaceae. Flavour and Fragrance Journal 19, 12-16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ffj.1265
Yates CJ and Ladd PG (2004) Breeding system, pollination and demography in the rare granite endemic shrub Verticordia staminosa ssp. staminosa in south-west Western Australia. Austral Ecology 29, 189-200. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1442-9993.2004.01336.x
RIRDC Farm Diversity Website: http://www.farmdiversity.com.au/
Rural Industries Research and
Development Corporation (RIRDC) |
RIRDC New and Developing Plant
Industries |
RIRDC New Crop Industries Handbook |
|
Grateful acknowledgment is made to the following: for plant names: Australian Plant Name Index, Australian National Herbarium http://www.anbg.gov.au/cpbr/databases/apni-search-full.html; ; The International Plant Names Index, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew/Harvard University Herbaria/Australian National Herbarium http://www.ipni.org/index.html; Plants Database, United States Department of Agriculture, National Resources Conservation Service http://plants.usda.gov/;DJ Mabberley (1997) The Plant Book, Cambridge University Press (Second Edition); JH Wiersma and B Leon (1999) World Economic Plants, CRC Press; RJ Hnatiuk (1990) Census of Australian Vascular Plants, Australian Government Publishing Service; for information: Science Direct http://www.sciencedirect.com/; Wiley Online Library http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/advanced/search; High Wire http://highwire.stanford.edu/cgi/search; Oxford Journals http://services.oxfordjournals.org/search.dtl; USDA National Agricultural Library http://agricola.nal.usda.gov/booleancube/booleancube_search_cit.html; for synonyms: The Plant List http://www.theplantlist.org/; for common names: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page; etc.
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Latest
update March 2017 by: ANCW