Journal article
Climatic, vegetation and edaphic influences on the probability of fire across mediterranean woodlands of south-eastern Australia
RK Gibson, RA Bradstock, T Penman, DA Keith, DA Driscoll
Journal of Biogeography | WILEY | Published : 2015
DOI: 10.1111/jbi.12547
Abstract
Aim: We investigated how the probability of burning is influenced by the time since fire (TSF) and gradients of climate, soil and vegetation in the fire-prone mediterranean-climate mallee woodlands of south-eastern Australia. This provided insight into the processes controlling contemporary fuel dynamics and fire regimes across biogeographical boundaries, and the consequent effects of climate change on potential shifts in boundaries between fuel systems and fire regimes, at a subcontinental scale. Location: South-eastern Australia. Methods: A desktop-based GIS was used to generate random sampling points across the study region to collect data on intersecting fire interval, rainfall, vegetati..
View full abstractGrants
Awarded by ARC Linkage grant
Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
The study was funded by an ARC Linkage grant (LP0776604) with Department of Environment, Water and Natural Resources (SA), the Native Vegetation Council (SA), SA Museum, and the Office of Environment and Heritage (NSW) as project partners. Thanks to Geoff Cary and Mick McCarthy for providing advice on the analyses, and to Brian van Wilgen and Joe Fontaine for providing comments on a draft of the manuscript.