4.5 Article

Fire mosaics in south-west Australian forest landscapes

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF WILDLAND FIRE
Volume 30, Issue 12, Pages 933-945

Publisher

CSIRO PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1071/WF20160

Keywords

prescribed fire; fire mosaic; seral diversity; bushfire; experimental management

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In a forest landscape in southwestern Australia, a 10-year experimental trial demonstrated that managing a fire mosaic through frequent ignition under low to moderate Forest Fire Danger Indices can result in a landscape with higher diversity of seral stages and smaller burnt patches compared to areas treated by fuel reduction prescribed burns and high intensity bushfires.
In fire-prone environments, prescribed burning is important for achieving many public land management objectives including protecting communities and the environment from damaging bushfires. There is evidence that in some biomes, reducing the size of burnt patches and creating a fine-scale mosaic of vegetation at different times since last fire (seral stages) may benefit biodiversity. However, planning and implementing an ongoing burning program to achieve this is problematic. To advance an understanding of the factors affecting burn patch size and seral diversity metrics, a novel experimental management trial that aimed to create and quantify a fine-scale fire mosaic was implemented in a south-west Australian forest landscape. The 10-year trial demonstrated that the fire mosaic characteristics, including diversity of seral stages, burnt patch size, patch distribution and patch connectedness, can be managed to a large extent by ignition frequency, which affects landscape fuel flammability, and the timing of the introduction of fire with respect to weather conditions. In this trial, the frequent introduction of fire under low to moderate Forest Fire Danger Indices resulted in a landscape comprising a quantifiably higher diversity of seral stages and smaller burnt patches than adjacent areas treated by fuel reduction prescribed burns and by a high intensity bushfire.

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