Landscape fire is a key but poorly understood component of the global carbon cycle. Predicting biomass consumption by fire at large spatial scales is essential to understanding carbon dynamics and hence how fire management can reduce greenhouse gas emissions and increase ecosystem carbon storage. An Australia‐wide field‐based survey (at 113 locations) across large‐scale macroecological gradients (climate, productivity and fire regimes) enabled estimation of how biomass combustion by surface fire directly affects continental‐scale carbon budgets. In terms of biomass consumption, we found clear trade‐offs between the frequency and severity of surface fires. In temperate southern Australia, characterised by less frequent and more severe fires,...
Landscape fires occur on a large scale in (sub)tropical savannas and grasslands, affecting ecosystem...
Fire is a ubiquitous feature of the Australian landscape – characteristics of natural flora suggest...
Australia's northern savannas have among the highest fire frequencies in the world. The climate is m...
Landscape fire is a key but poorly understood component of the global carbon cycle. Predicting bioma...
Landscape fire is a key but poorly understood component of the global carbon cycle. Predicting bioma...
Aim: Many tropical savannas are undergoing a trend of increasing woody biomass, or 'woody thickening...
Savanna ecosystems comprise 22% of the global terrestrial surface and 25% of Australia (almost 1.9 m...
© 2014 The Authors. Global Change Biology Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. Savanna ecosystems com...
Savanna ecosystems comprise 22% of the global terrestrial surface and 25% of Australia (almost 1.9 m...
1. There are concerns that frequent intense fires are reducing biodiversity on the Arnhem Plateau wi...
Savannas comprise a large area of the global land surface and are subject to frequent disturbance th...
Accurate estimation of emissions from biomass burning and their impact on carbon storage requires pr...
Landscape fires occur on a large scale in (sub)tropical savannas and grasslands, affecting ecosystem...
Fire is probably the greatest natural and anthropogenic environmental disturbance in Australian trop...
Landscape fires occur on a large scale in (sub)tropical savannas and grasslands, affecting ecosystem...
Fire is a ubiquitous feature of the Australian landscape – characteristics of natural flora suggest...
Australia's northern savannas have among the highest fire frequencies in the world. The climate is m...
Landscape fire is a key but poorly understood component of the global carbon cycle. Predicting bioma...
Landscape fire is a key but poorly understood component of the global carbon cycle. Predicting bioma...
Aim: Many tropical savannas are undergoing a trend of increasing woody biomass, or 'woody thickening...
Savanna ecosystems comprise 22% of the global terrestrial surface and 25% of Australia (almost 1.9 m...
© 2014 The Authors. Global Change Biology Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. Savanna ecosystems com...
Savanna ecosystems comprise 22% of the global terrestrial surface and 25% of Australia (almost 1.9 m...
1. There are concerns that frequent intense fires are reducing biodiversity on the Arnhem Plateau wi...
Savannas comprise a large area of the global land surface and are subject to frequent disturbance th...
Accurate estimation of emissions from biomass burning and their impact on carbon storage requires pr...
Landscape fires occur on a large scale in (sub)tropical savannas and grasslands, affecting ecosystem...
Fire is probably the greatest natural and anthropogenic environmental disturbance in Australian trop...
Landscape fires occur on a large scale in (sub)tropical savannas and grasslands, affecting ecosystem...
Fire is a ubiquitous feature of the Australian landscape – characteristics of natural flora suggest...
Australia's northern savannas have among the highest fire frequencies in the world. The climate is m...