Australian New Crops Web Site
Supported by the Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation

Listing of Interesting Plants of the World

Inocarpus fagifer

Popularity of Inocarpus fagifer over time

[Plots of numbers of papers mentioning Inocarpus fagifer (filled column histogram and left hand axis scale) and line of best fit, 1926 to 2006 (complete line, with equation and % variation accounted for, in box on the left hand side); Plots of a proportional micro index, derived from numbers of papers mentioning Inocarpus fagifer as a proportion (scaled by multiplying by one million) of the total number of papers published for that year (broken line frequency polygon and right hand scale) and line of best fit, 1926 to 2006 (broken line, with equation and % variation accounted for, in broken line box on the right hand side)]

Total Mentions (Biological Abstracts/Biosis Previews):

References

 

McConkey KR, Drake DR (2006) Flying foxes cease to function as seed dispersers long before they become rare. Ecology (Washington D C) 87, 271-6. Contact: McConkey, Kim R. ; AVRA House,7-102-54 Sai Enclave, Hyderabad 500007, Andhra Pradesh, India

 

Banack SA, Grant GS (2003) Reproduction and behaviour of the Samoan flying fox, Pteropus samoensis (Chiroptera, Pteropodidae). Mammalia 67, 419-37. Contact: Banack, S. A. ; Department of Biological Science, California State University, Fullerton, CA, 92831, USA

 

Siwatibau S, Boland DJ (2002) Community preferences for tree species for household wood products in Vanuatu: A summary of four surveys. Pacific Conservation Biology 8, 147-58. Contact: Siwatibau, S. ; Samabula, P.O. Box 4641, Suva, Fiji

 

Green PT, O'Dowd DJ, Lake PS (1997) Control of seedling recruitment by land crabs in rain forest on a remote oceanic island. Ecology (Washington D C) 78, 2474-86. Contact: Green, Peter T. ; Ecosyst. Dynamics Group, Res. Sch. Biol. Sci., Australian Natl. Univ., Canberra 2601, Australia

 

Bourke M (1996) Edible indigenous nuts in Papua New Guinea: Their potential for commercial development. WANATCA Yearbook 20, 37-40. Contact: Dep. Hum. Geography, Res. Sch. Pacific Asian Stud., Aust. Natl. Univ., Canberra, ACT 0200, Australia

 

Henty EE (1985) Some Nut-Bearing Plants in Papua New-Guinea. WANATCA Yearbook 10, 19-27. Contact: HENTY E E; DIV BOTANY, OFFICE FORESTS, PO BOX 314, LAE, PAPUA NEW GUINEA

 

 

 

 


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All information is included in good faith but this website does not warrant or guarantee the accuracy of any information on these pages, nor does the website accept responsibility for any loss arising from the use of this information.  Views and opinions are those of the authors themselves.  Grateful acknowledgment is made to the following for plant names: Australian Plant Name Index, Australian National Herbarium http://www.anbg.gov.au/cpbr/databases/apni-search-full.html; The International Plant Names Index, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew/Harvard University Herbaria/Australian National Herbarium http://www.ipni.org/index.html; Plants Database, United States Department of Agriculture, National Resources Conservation Service http://plants.usda.gov/; DJ Mabberley (1997) The Plant Book, Cambridge University Press (Second Edition); JH Wiersma and B Leon (1999) World Economic Plants, CRC Press; RJ Hnatiuk (1990) Census of Australian Vascular Plants, Australian Government Publishing Service.


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Latest update 31 January 2008 by: ANCW