We compared measures of ecosystem state across six adjacent land-tenure groups in the intact tropical savanna landscapes of northern Australia. Tenure groups include two managed by Aboriginal owners, two national parks, a cluster of pastoral leases, and a military training area. This information is of relevance to the debate about the role of indigenous lands in the Australian conservation estate. The timing and frequency of fire was determined by satellite imagery; the biomass and composition of the herb-layer and the abundance of large feral herbivores by field surveys; and weediness by analysis of a Herbarium database. European tenures varied greatly in fire frequencies but were consistently burnt earlier in the dry season than the two A...
Aim: Traditional management of fire in the world's savannas is of vital interest for contemporary ma...
Fire is a dominant feature of tropical savannas throughout the world, and provides a unique opportun...
Tropical and semi-arid savannas are extremely fire prone (Lawes, 2011) with dry season fires being a...
Aim To compare fire behaviour and fire management practice at a site managed continuously by traditi...
The definitive version is available at www.blackwell-synergy.comWe surveyed herbaceous biomass acros...
Aim To describe the nexus between Aboriginal landscape burning and patterns of habitat use by kangar...
Indigenous groups are increasingly combining traditional ecological knowledge and Western scientific...
Colonialism has disrupted Indigenous socioecological systems around the globe, including those suppo...
Indigenous groups are increasingly combining traditional ecological knowledge and Western scientific...
The decline of Northern Cypress Pine (Callitris intratropica) throughout the tropical savannas of no...
The savannas of northern Australia are the most fire-prone part of a fire-prone continent. The savan...
1. There are concerns that frequent intense fires are reducing biodiversity on the Arnhem Plateau wi...
Aim: To assess hypotheses about the role of anthropogenic fire in the maintenance and origin of a fi...
Fire is a natural process in tropical savannas, but contemporary cycles of recurrent, extensive, sev...
Biodiversity loss is often attributable to multiple interacting pressures that are moderated across ...
Aim: Traditional management of fire in the world's savannas is of vital interest for contemporary ma...
Fire is a dominant feature of tropical savannas throughout the world, and provides a unique opportun...
Tropical and semi-arid savannas are extremely fire prone (Lawes, 2011) with dry season fires being a...
Aim To compare fire behaviour and fire management practice at a site managed continuously by traditi...
The definitive version is available at www.blackwell-synergy.comWe surveyed herbaceous biomass acros...
Aim To describe the nexus between Aboriginal landscape burning and patterns of habitat use by kangar...
Indigenous groups are increasingly combining traditional ecological knowledge and Western scientific...
Colonialism has disrupted Indigenous socioecological systems around the globe, including those suppo...
Indigenous groups are increasingly combining traditional ecological knowledge and Western scientific...
The decline of Northern Cypress Pine (Callitris intratropica) throughout the tropical savannas of no...
The savannas of northern Australia are the most fire-prone part of a fire-prone continent. The savan...
1. There are concerns that frequent intense fires are reducing biodiversity on the Arnhem Plateau wi...
Aim: To assess hypotheses about the role of anthropogenic fire in the maintenance and origin of a fi...
Fire is a natural process in tropical savannas, but contemporary cycles of recurrent, extensive, sev...
Biodiversity loss is often attributable to multiple interacting pressures that are moderated across ...
Aim: Traditional management of fire in the world's savannas is of vital interest for contemporary ma...
Fire is a dominant feature of tropical savannas throughout the world, and provides a unique opportun...
Tropical and semi-arid savannas are extremely fire prone (Lawes, 2011) with dry season fires being a...