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  1. The Flora Tasmaniae is a description of the plants discovered in Tasmania during the Ross expedition written by Joseph Dalton Hooker and published by Reeve Brothers in London between 1855 and 1860. Hooker sailed on HMS Erebus as assistant surgeon.

  2. The Tasmanian Herbarium is part of the Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery (TMAG) and contains the largest collection of Tasmanian plant and fungus specimens anywhere in the world. This site contains both a Vascular Plant Flora and a Lichen Flora for Tasmania.

  3. Flora of Tasmania. For such a tiny island state, the diversity of Tasmania's vegetation is astounding - mosaics of alpine herb fields and colourful heathland, ancient rainforests, tracts of native grasslands and dry windswept coastal vegetation.

  4. Tasmania - Flora, Fauna, Ecosystems: In general, the wettest areas have temperate rainforests, largely of beech or myrtle; areas having 30 to 60 inches (760 to 1,520 mm) of precipitation annually support good-quality eucalypt forests, and the drier areas carry poor-quality eucalypt forests or savanna woodland.

  5. flora.tmag.tas.gov.au › about › introductionThe Tasmanian Flora

    The Flora of Tasmania Online aims to provide a modern account of the Tasmanian flora. The classification and arrangement of families used in it differs, in some places significantly, to that used at the Tasmanian Herbarium to sort the c. 150,000 vascular plant collections housed there.

  6. Flora Tasmaniae (abreviado Fl. Tasman. ) [ 1 ] es un libro con descripciones botánicas que fue escrito por el botánico y explorador inglés Joseph Dalton Hooker y publicado en dos partes en los años 1855-59.

  7. THE LICHEN FLORA OF TASMANIA. Gintaras Kantvilas 1. Introduction. With an estimated 1500 taxa, many of which are yet to be discovered, identified or formally named, lichens represent a very significant part of Tasmania’s biodiversity.