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Planting to conserve threatened nomadic pollinators in NSW Australia, several species of native plants produce large volumes of nectar and pollen, with an unusually high proportion of plants pollinated by vertebrates Highly mobile vertebrate pollinators (birds and bats) disperse pollen over large areas during feeding bouts, promoting out-crossing and increasing genetic variation in the plants and
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT ASSESSMENT GUIDELINES Tetratheca glandulosa pollen exchange) will constitute the ‘local population’ T glandulosais stoloniferous which means that individual plants in a population may be clonal, effectively reducing the apparent size of any given population (Lacey, pers obs ) It should be assumed that a particular population is viable regardless of its size, until further
Bird survey methods - NSW Environment and Heritage count simply because a smaller area can be observed from the sample point The results can be adjusted for variable visibility by excluding observations made at sites with better visibility which are 30-50m from the sample point All sites can then be Point count method compared using only birds seen within a 0-15m and 15-30m radius of the