Journal article

Dryness thresholds for fire occurrence vary by forest type along an aridity gradient: evidence from Southern Australia

TJ Duff, JG Cawson, S Harris

Landscape Ecology | SPRINGER | Published : 2018

Abstract

Context: Wildfires are common in localities where there is sufficient productivity to allow the accumulation of biomass combined with seasonality that allows this to dry and transition to a flammable state. An understanding of the conditions under which vegetated landscapes become flammable is valuable for assessing fire risk and determining how fire regimes may alter with climate change. Objectives: Weather based metrics of dryness are a standard approach for estimating the potential for fires to occur in the near term. However, such approaches do not consider the contribution of vegetation communities. We aim to evaluate differences in weather-based dryness thresholds for fire occurrence b..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Funding Acknowledgements

This work was undertaken as part of the project 'Flammability of Tall Mist Forests' which was funded via the Victorian Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning (DELWP) and the Bushfire Climatology Project funded by DELWP and managed and administered by the Bushfire and Natural Hazards Cooperative Research Centre. Data were sourced from the Victorian Government data repository and the Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning. We gratefully acknowledge the contribution of Miguel Cruz and Trent Penman in improving this manuscript, as well as the contribution of our anonymous referees.