A biogeographic model of fire regimes in Australia: current and future implications
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Abstract
ABSTRACT Aim Patterns of fire regimes across Australia exhibit biogeographic variation in response to four processes. Variations in area burned and fire frequency result from differences in the rates of ‘switching’ of biomass growth, availability to burn, fire weather and ignition. Therefore differing processes limit fire (i.e. the lowest rate of switching) in differing ecosystems. Current and future trends in fire frequency were explored on this basis. Location Case studies of forests (cool temperate to tropical) and woodlands (temperate to arid) were examined. These represent a broad range of Australian biomes and current fire regimes. Methods Information on the four processes was applied to each case study…
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768
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- 23.24
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- 100%
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Authors
1Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Fire regime
- Woodland
- Environmental science
- Biome
- Fire ecology
- Dominance (genetics)
- Dryness
- Ecology
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Climate action
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