Fire management issues in northern Australia - Fire management and savanna landscapes in northern Australia

被引:0
|
作者
Russell-Smith, J [1 ]
Allan, G [1 ]
Thackway, R [1 ]
Rosling, T [1 ]
Smith, R [1 ]
机构
[1] Cooperat Res Ctr Trop Savannas, Darwin, NT, Australia
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
The vegetation cover of northern Australia ranges from open forest or woodland savanna (dominated by eucalypts over a range of highly flammable annual and perennial grasses) to hummock and tussock grasslands occupying sandy and fertile fine-textured soils. Like monsoonal eastern Indonesia, the major fire period occurs over the long dry season, typically between April/May-October/November. People light fires for a range of land management purposes; lightning strikes cause relatively few fires at the start of the annual wet season. Based on regional mapping of fires from satellite imagery (mostly NOAA-AVHRR and LANDSAT) from the 1980s, we can identify two broad patterns concerning the application of fire in northern Australia. In northwestern and northern Australia, and possibly also on parts of Cape York in the northeast, intense wild fires typically late in the dry season burn vast tracts annually. Ecological studies indicate that such fire regimes are having catastrophic impacts on native fire-sensitive species, communities, and habitats. Conversely, elsewhere across northern Australia but especially on more productive pastoral lands, the restricted application/absence of burning is in some cases leading to native and exotic woody species thickening/invading, likewise with profound ecologic and economic consequences. Growing recognition of these issues has led to the development of collaborative fire management programs in various parts of northern Australia. Similar cooperative approaches involving practitioners from northern Australia working with relevant parties in eastern Indonesia and Papua New Guinea would bring significant benefit to the study of regional landscape management issues.
引用
收藏
页码:95 / 101
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Background to the project - 'The use of fire in land management in Eastern Indonesia and Northern Australia'
    Myers, B
    Hill, G
    Russell-Smith, J
    FIRE AND SUSTAINABLE AGRICULTURAL AND FORESTRY DEVELOPMENT IN EASTERN INDONESIA AND NORTHERN AUSTRALIA, PROCEEDINGS, 2000, (91): : 13 - 17
  • [22] CLEANING, PROTECTING, OR ABATING? MAKING INDIGENOUS FIRE MANAGEMENT "WORK'' IN NORTHERN AUSTRALIA
    Petty, Aaron M.
    deKoninck, Vanessa
    Orlove, Ben
    JOURNAL OF ETHNOBIOLOGY, 2015, 35 (01) : 140 - 162
  • [24] FIRE AS A MANAGEMENT TOOL FOR A TROPICAL WOODY WEED - MIMOSA PIGRA IN NORTHERN AUSTRALIA
    LONSDALE, WM
    MILLER, IL
    JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, 1993, 39 (02) : 77 - 87
  • [25] Simplifying the savanna: the trajectory of fire-sensitive vegetation mosaics in northern Australia
    Russell-Smith, Jeremy
    Edwards, Andrew C.
    Price, Owen F.
    JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY, 2012, 39 (07) : 1303 - 1317
  • [26] Fire resilience of ant assemblages in long-unburnt savanna of northern Australia
    Parr, Catherine L.
    Andersen, Alan N.
    AUSTRAL ECOLOGY, 2008, 33 (07) : 830 - 838
  • [27] Challenges for prescribed fire management in Australia's fire-prone rangelands - the example of the Northern Territory
    Russell-Smith, Jeremy
    Edwards, Andrew C.
    Sangha, Kamaljit K.
    Yates, Cameron P.
    Gardener, Mark R.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF WILDLAND FIRE, 2020, 29 (4-5) : 339 - 353
  • [28] Australia burning: Fire ecology, policy and management issues
    Vanclay, Frank
    RURAL SOCIETY, 2005, 15 (02) : 219 - 221
  • [29] Australia Burning: Fire Ecology, Policy and Management Issues
    Kirkpatrick, J. B.
    GEOGRAPHICAL RESEARCH, 2005, 43 (02) : 255 - 255
  • [30] Fire ecology and Aboriginal land management in central Arnhem Land, northern Australia: a tradition of ecosystem management
    Yibarbuk, D
    Whitehead, PJ
    Russell-Smith, J
    Jackson, D
    Godjuwa, C
    Fisher, A
    Cooke, P
    Choquenot, D
    Bowman, DMJS
    JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY, 2001, 28 (03) : 325 - 343