Blackwood management : learning from New Zealand : proceedings of an international workshop Rotorua, New Zealand, 22 November 2002 / edited by A.G. Brown
Published
Canberra : Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation, 2004
Declining availability of cabinet timbers from Australian native forests has led to increased attention on their cultivation and the management of native forests from which they may be obtained. Blackwood is a species of special interest: It is amenable to cultivation and management, it has an extensive natural range in eastern and southern Australia, it is well suited to high-value products, and it has an established favourable reputation as a furniture timber. Relevant interest groups are widely dispersed in Australia and New Zealand, and there has been no focal point for strategic interaction or exchange of information. The workshop which is the subject of this report is the third in a series intended to bring these interests together and to develop a basis for ongoing interaction and mutual assistance
Analysis
Acacia
Agroforestry
Timber
New Zealand
Tasmania
Victoria
Management
Scientific research
Case studies
Australia overseas comparisons
Conferences
Wattle
Electronic resource
Notes
"July 2004"
"An Australian Government initiative"--T.p
A report for the RIRDC/Land & Water Australia/FWPRDC/MDBC Joint Venture Agroforestry Program
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references
Notes
Also available in an online version
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2004 Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation