New Zealand Journal of Botany abstracts
Vegetation and Flora of Sail Rock, Hen and Chickens Islands
I. A. E. Atkinson
Botany Division Substation, Department of Scientific and Industrial Research, Lower Hutt
Abstract Sail Rock appears to be the least modified of the small islands so far described from the Hauraki Gulf, northern New Zealand. The four communities mapped can be correlated with sites of differing stability; a vegetation of
Disphyma australe and
Muehlenbeckia complexa on cliffs,
Coprosma repens scrub on unstable slopes of fine talus,
Corynocarpus laevigatus forest on an unstable slope of boulders, and
Paratrophis banksii-Melicope ternata forest on a semistable talus slope. The composition of the island's vegetation, compared to other islands, can be related to lack of disturbance by fire and the absence on Sail Rock of the kiore or Polynesian rat
(Rattus exulans). Although small, the island can be used as part of a discontinuous control area for studying the effects of this rat on the flora, fauna, and structure of New Zealand coastal communities.
Received 13 June 1972
New Zealand Journal of Botany 10: 545-58.
PDF file of entire paper: medium quality (1673K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process)
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