TY - JOUR A1 - Keith, David A. A1 - Miles, Jackie A1 - Mackenzie, Berin D. E. T1 - Vascular flora of the South East Forests region, Eden, New South Wales T2 - Cunninghamia : a journal of plant ecology for eastern Australia N2 - An exhaustive review of available information revealed 1522 native vascular plant taxa with confirmed records in the Eden region. A further 136 taxa potentially occur in the region, but these remain to be confirmed. Families represented by large numbers of taxa in the indigenous flora include the Fabaceae, Poaceae, Asteraceae, Myrtaceae and Orchidaceae. Species frequencies were highly skewed with 74% of the flora represented in less than 1% of survey samples and only three taxa represented in more than 40% of samples. A large number of records (350 taxa) were evaluated and refuted, emphasizing the importance of critical validation when compiling biological inventory data from multiple sources. Errors are most likely to arise from nomenclatural synonymy and other duplications, misidentifications and erroneous locality information. The confirmed vascular flora of the Eden region is relatively species-rich compared with other regions in tropical, temperate and semi-arid Australia, although these regions are less well-known botanically. However, the proportion of endemism (1%) is comparatively low, with 18 taxa unique to the region and a further 14 taxa with distributions extending just beyond the region. The Eden region includes 32 taxa listed as endangered or vulnerable in Australia and a further six taxa listed as endangered in New South Wales but not throughout Australia. Thirty-eight taxa were listed as rare in Australia and a further 39 were considered to be uncommon throughout their distribution. Four hundred and sixty-six taxa were considered to be uncommon within the Eden region. Two hundred and seventy-six taxa reached their distributional limits in the Eden region, about three quarters of these reaching their southern limits. Fifty taxa were represented in the region by disjunct populations. Introduced taxa accounted for approximately 20% of the total regional vascular flora, although this proportion is likely to underestimate the introduced flora given the limitations of available data. The introduced flora is dominated by Poaceae, Asteraceae, Fabaceae and Caryophyllaceae. Very few introduced taxa were widespread in native vegetation. The most common introduced taxa were herbs with long-distance propagule dispersal mechanisms. Y1 - 1999 UR - http://publikationen.ub.uni-frankfurt.de/frontdoor/index/index/docId/36519 UR - https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:hebis:30:3-365193 SN - 0727-9620 VL - 6 IS - 1 SP - 219 EP - 281 ER -