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The influence of prescribed fire on the extent of wildfire in savanna landscapes of western Arnhem Land, Australia

Autores

Owen F. Price ; Jeremy Russell-Smith ;  and Felicity Watt

Ano de Publicação
2012
Categoria
UNIDADES DE CONSERVAÇÃO
Descrição

Abstract.

Fire regimes in many north Australian savanna regions are today characterised by frequent wildfires occurring
in the latter part of the 7-month dry season. A fire management program instigated from 2005 over 24 000 km2 of
biodiversity-rich Western Arnhem Land aims to reduce the area and severity of late dry-season fires, and associated
greenhouse gas emissions, through targeted early dry-season prescribed burning. This study used fire history mapping
derived mostly from Landsat imagery over the period 1990–2009 and statistical modelling to quantify the mitigation of
late dry-season wildfire through prescribed burning. From 2005, there has been a reduction in mean annual total proportion
burnt (from 38 to 30%), and particularly of late dry-season fires (from 29 to 12.5%). The slope of the relationship between
the proportion of early-season prescribed fire and subsequent late dry-season wildfire was,–1. This means that imposing
prescribed early dry-season burning can substantially reduce late dry-season fire area, by direct one-to-one replacement.
There is some evidence that the spatially strategic program has achieved even better mitigation than this. The observed
reduction in late dry-season fire without concomitant increase in overall area burnt has important ecological and
greenhouse gas emissions implications. This efficient mitigation of wildfire contrasts markedly with observations reported
from temperate fire-prone forested systems.
Additional keywords: fire management, greenhouse gas emissions, Leverage, planned fire, unplanned fire.

Tipo de publicação
Publicações periódicas (revistas, jornais, boletins)
Local da publicação
Missoula, Montana, Canada - https://www.publish.csiro.au/WF/WF10079
Nº da edição ou volume
International Journal of Wildland Fire 2012, 21, 297–305 - http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/WF10079
Editora
International Association of Wildfland fire - https://www.iawfonline.org/international-journal-wildland-fire-ijwf/
Link