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We are very excited to be joined by Professor Stephen D. Hopper AC as our guest speaker for the November webinar!

Professor Hopper will summarise close to 60 years of visiting the Leeuwin Naturaliste Ridge, and focuses on rare plant surveys conducted in the 1980s when substantial components of the flora were undescribed. For example, of the 50 species of Caladenia (Orchidaceae) now known in the Augusta Margaret River Shire, about half were named by Prof Hopper and colleagues, notably Andrew Brown. Local endemics are a feature of the Ridge. Rare communities include those of inland granite outcrops, each with their own mix of rock outcrop and gnamma (rock pool) species. Also some rare hybrids are known. The fire ephemeral Eremosyne pectinata is from an ancient lineage allied to rainforest shrubs and trees of eastern Australia and South America. Discoveries of new weeds is still occurring. Lastly, a completely fresh perspective on the flora emerges from walking together with Wadandi people, the Webb family in particular.

Did you want a printable poster of this event to display?
No worries! Just email conservation@wildflowersocietywa.org.au and ask for one and we can send it through for you to pass on to others who you think will be interested!

PLEASE READ, IMPORTANT INFO:

This webinar will require you to enter your first and last name, and email address to allow you to join the webinar. This simply allows us to ensure only ticket holding emails can attend due to limited spaces. We recommend allowing yourself five minutes prior to the webinar to register (through the usual webinar link) so you don’t miss out on the start. Thanks for your understanding!

One ticket = One webinar link (needed for one device). The number of tickets you require is based on the number of devices that will be used to join the webinar, not the number of people attending.

I.e. If multiple people will be attending the webinar on the same device (laptop, T.V. screen, computer, phone, etc.) then only one ticket must be reserved.

This webinar will require you to enter your first and last name, and email address to allow you to join the webinar. This simply allows us to ensure only ticket holding emails can attend due to limited spaces. We recommend allowing yourself five minutes prior to the webinar to register (through the usual webinar link) so you don’t miss out on the start. Thanks for your understanding!

Communicating How Home Gardeners can green W.A.

Welcome to our fourth webinar where we are luck enough to be joined by Nancy Scade; where they will be presenting on how we can communicate to home gardeners can green WA! A topic of native plant survival many of us are interested in from past failed attempts! But not only will Nancy be helping us in our gardens, but discussing the impacts of our garden choices and how choosing local flora does much more for our environment than just look fantastic!

Reserve your tickets to join us from the comfort of your own home, or relaxing on holiday with our Zoom link! Your personalised zoom link will come with your ticket confirmation, and we ask that it is not shared with anyone as each ticket is only available for one device – and we have limited tickets!

Want to keep up-to-date with the event? Click going on the Facebook Event Page
Stay connected for our future webinars by liking our Facebook Page, or become a member to receive email updates!

Please read Nancy’s full summary below: Continue reading “Communicating How Home Gardeners can green W.A.”

A Jewel in the Crown of a Global Biodiversity Hotspot: Yule Brook and the Greater Brixton Street Wetlands

Joint us for our second webinar of the series with guest speaker; Emeritus Professor Hans Lambers from the school of biological sciences of UWA.

Get in fast and reserve your tickets before they sell out! Your confirmation email will have your own private Zoom link to the webinar to click on at the time of the event.

Make sure you are staying up-to-date by liking the WSWA Facebook page and following the webinar event page by clicking on the links below:

Wildflower Society of Western Australia’s Official Facebook Page

Webinar Two Facebook Event

Webinar Summary:

South-western Australia is a global biodiversity hotspot, where the greatest plant species diversity is found on the most severely nutrient-impoverished soils. Three National Parks and Greater Perth harbour the greatest plant species diversity in south-western Australia. Within Greater Perth, the Greater Brixton Street Wetlands are notorious for their enormous plant species richness, and home to numerous plant species that have special conservation value as well as several threatened ecological communities. If we do not mitigate climate change and continue to develop Perth based on out-of-date principles that ignore the sensitive hydrology of our region, many threatened species and ecological communities will be pushed towards extinction. We have a choice, and can prevent at least some of this, but we have to act, and act now.

Piesse Brook Rehabilitation

Ken Patterson will talk about the work the Friends of Piesse Brook have done over many years to improve the environment of this lovely brook which runs down from Pickering Brook to join the Helena River just above the pumpback dam.  It passes through areas of orchards and farmland where, over the years, the natural stream-side vegetation had been replaced by weeds such as blackberry and watsonia which had spread down into the national park.  So a Friends Group was formed to start doing something about this.  Ken will explain what they have done and illustrate his talk with excellent ‘before and after’ photos.

“Slime Moulds” presented by Karina Knight

Slime moulds are eukaryotic organisms, originally classified as fungi but not so any longer.  Karina Knight,  ex WA Herbarium Collections Manager, has continued the work on the Margaret Brimes collection  & her own interest in these strange, little known organisms found worldwide.

 

The Old Herbarium’s Native Plant Garden with Alex George

Designed to showcase some of WA’s most spectacular plants, the Agriculture Department (which owned the site) had to be convinced it was a good idea first,  Alex will illustrate a magnificent creation – and a rather sad ending.

 

Alex George Presentation

Join us for the return of our much loved Branch Meetings with guest speaker our very own Alex George giving a special presentation on the ‘Plant Collectors of the South West’ from the early French to present day.

 

Grasses of the South West and Hills

Una Bell is a hills local who has recently published a field guide to the native grasses of the Perth Hills. In this talk, she will help us to differentiate between native grasses and weeds.

DNA and the Marsupial Mushrooms

Bio: Elaine Davison is a plant pathologist/mycologist who has worked on diseases in native ecosystems and horticulture.  Since retirement from the public service she has developed a long held interest in Amanita mushrooms.  She recently received a grant from the WA Naturalists’ Club Inc. and Lotterywest for DNA sequencing of amanitas which complements previous work funded by ABRS.

The talk will introduce the fungi, covering what they are, and their importance in the ecosystem.  DNA techniques now underpin their identification, and, within the cosmopolitan mushroom genus Amanita, have revealed a group that is unique to Australia.