- Abutilon julianae
taxobox
name = "Abutilon julianae"
status = CR
status_system = EPBC
status_ref = [http://www.environment.gov.au/cgi-bin/sprat/public/publicspecies.pl?taxon_id=27797]
regnum =Plantae
unranked_divisio =Angiosperms
unranked_classis =Eudicots
unranked_ordo =Rosids
ordo =Malvales
familia =Malvaceae
genus =Abutilon
species = "A. julianae"
binomial = "Abutilon julianae"
binomial_authority = Endl. [APNI | name = Abutilon julianae Endl.| id =1847 ] |"Abutilon julianae" is a small
shrub of the genusAbutilon believed endemic toNorfolk Island , where it was last seen about 1910. For more than seventy years it was consideredextinct , apparently killed out by grazing stock.In the mid 1980s control of
feral rabbit s on nearby Phillip Island allowed plant seedlings to survive in accessible areas for the first time in more than one hundred years, and some seedlings of "Abutilon julianae" were discovered. As the species had never been recorded on Phillip Island this was one of the first unexpected bonus benefits of rabbit control (and subsequent eradication). Plants must have survived in the few cliff-bound places inaccessible to both rabbits and people to provide the source of seed for the newly-discovered plants. The species is now widely grown on Norfolk Island and natural regeneration on Phillip Island is growing well, though still very rare. It is listed as Critically Endangered under Australia's Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act.References
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