Journal article

How does prescribed fire shape bird and plant communities in a temperate dry forest ecosystem?

FW Rainsford, LT Kelly, SWJ Leonard, AF Bennett

Ecological Applications | Published : 2021

Abstract

To mitigate the impact of severe wildfire on human society and the environment, prescribed fire is widely used in forest ecosystems to reduce fuel loads and limit fire spread. To avoid detrimental effects on conservation values, it is imperative to understand how prescribed fire affects taxa having a range of different adaptations to disturbance. Such studies will have greatest benefit if they extend beyond short-term impacts of burning. We used a field study to examine the effects of prescribed fire on birds and plants across a 36-yr post-fire chronosequence in a temperate dry forest ecosystem in southeastern Australia, and by making comparison with long-unburned reference sites (79 yr sinc..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning, State Government of Victoria


Funding Acknowledgements

This research was in part funded through an Australian Research Council Linkage Project (LP150100765) "Spatially explicit solutions for managing fire and biodiversity" awarded to CIs Kelly, Bennett, Clarke, Friend and McCarthy. Funding was also provided by the Victorian Government Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning and La Trobe University. This research was approved by the La Trobe University Animal Ethics Committee (approval number: AEC 17-31).