Journal article

Surface runoff and erosion after prescribed burning and the effect of different fire regimes in forests and shrublands: A review

JG Cawson, GJ Sheridan, HG Smith, PNJ Lane

International Journal of Wildland Fire | Published : 2012

Abstract

This paper examines the state of knowledge about the effects of prescribed burning on surface runoff and erosion at point to catchment scales in forests and shrublands. Fires can increase surface runoff and erosion by removing vegetation, changing soil hydrologic properties and providing a readily erodible layer of sediment and ash. Catchment-scale studies in prescribed-burnt areas usually report minimal impacts from the burn. However, measurements at smaller spatial scales suggest that large changes to hydrologic properties and processes do occur, and a debris-flow example from Australia demonstrates that large catchment-scale impacts are possible. It appears that existing catchment-scale s..

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Grants

Funding Acknowledgements

This project was funded by a Melbourne Research Scholarship (The University of Melbourne), the Cooperative Research Centre for Forestry (Tasmania, Australia) and Melbourne Water. Thank you to Petter Nyman for helping collect information about the debris-flow example and to three anonymous reviewers for providing valuable feedback on the manuscript.