Melina Gillespie
University of Queensland
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Featured researches published by Melina Gillespie.
Ecological processes | 2013
Patrick Audet; A. J. Gravina; V. Glenn; P. McKenna; H. Vickers; Melina Gillespie; D. R. Mulligan
IntroductionThis study depicts broad-scale revegetation patterns following sand mining on North Stradbroke Island, south-eastern Queensland, Australia.MethodsBased on an ecological timeline spanning 4–20 years post-rehabilitation, the structure of these ecosystems (n = 146) was assessed by distinguishing between periods of ‘older’ (pre-1995) and ‘younger’ (post-1995) rehabilitation practices.ResultsThe general rehabilitation outlook appeared promising, whereby an adequate forest composition and suitable levels of native biodiversity (consisting of mixed-eucalypt communities) were achieved across the majority of rehabilitated sites over a relatively short time. Still, older sites (n = 36) appeared to deviate relative to natural analogues as indicated by their lack of under-storey heath and simplified canopy composition now characterised by mono-dominant black sheoak (Allocasuarina littoralis) reaching up to 60% of the total tree density. These changes coincided with lower soil fertility parameters (e.g., total carbon, total nitrogen, and nutrient holding capacity) leading us to believe that altered growth conditions associated with the initial mining disturbance could have facilitated an opportunistic colonisation by this species. Once established, it is suspected that the black sheoak’s above/belowground ecological behaviour (i.e., relating to its leaf-litter allelopathy and potential for soil-nitrogen fixation) further exacerbated its mono-dominant distribution by inhibiting the development of other native species.ConclusionsAlthough rehabilitation techniques on-site have undergone refinements to improve site management, our findings support that putative changes in edaphic conditions in combination with the competitive characteristics of some plant species can facilitate conditions leading to alternative ecological outcomes among rehabilitated ecosystems. Based on these outcomes, future studies would benefit from in depth spatio-temporal analyses to verify these mechanisms at finer investigative scales.
Restoration Ecology | 1999
Ing Toh; Melina Gillespie; David Lamb
Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment | 2012
H. Vickers; Melina Gillespie; A. J. Gravina
Life of Mine Conference (AusIMM) | 2012
Alex M. Lechner; Sven Arnold; Andrew Fletcher; Ascelin Gordon; Peter D. Erskine; Melina Gillespie; D. R. Mulligan
The AusIMM Bulletin | 2014
V. Glenn; David Doley; Corinne Unger; Nic McCaffrey; P. McKenna; Melina Gillespie; Elizabeth Williams
First International Seminar on Mine Closure, 2006 13-15 September, Perth | 2006
D. R. Mulligan; Melina Gillespie; A. J. Gravina; A. Currey
Ecological Engineering | 2015
Melina Gillespie; V. Glenn; David Doley
Life of Mine Conference (AusIMM) | 2012
Melina Gillespie; Peter D. Erskine
Second Australian Workshop on Native Seed Biology for Revegetation | 1997
Melina Gillespie; S. M. Bellairs; D. R. Mulligan
Tom Farrell Institute, Mined Land Rehabilitation conference | 2014
Corinne Unger; Alan Woodley; Melina Gillespie; Thomas Baumgartl; Carl Smith; Peter D. Erskine; Andew Fletcher