The Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area has ecosystems and cultural landscapes that have been created and/or influenced by the interactions between the physical environment, the biological environment, fire regimes and people. Lightning is the dominant cause of fire in the 2010s, yet was rarely recorded as a cause of fire before 1980, when arsonists caused most fires. The main potential impact of this change in primary cause of fire incidence on the values of the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area is the loss of ecosystems dominated by highly fire-sensitive palaeoendemics, organosols and Aboriginal cultural landscapes. At the same time as these values are threatened, a lack of burning threatens some fire-dependent vegetation type...
The World Heritage listed landscapes of southwest Tasmania are an ideal model system for investigati...
Untangling the nuanced relationships between landscape, fire disturbance, human agency, and climate ...
Western Tasmania, Australia contains some of the highest levels of biological endemism of any temper...
The Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area has ecosystems and cultural landscapes that have been c...
The Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area (TWWHA) has globally significant natural and cultural v...
The Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area (TWWHA) has globally significant natural and cultural v...
In many natural areas, changes in fire regimes since European settlement have resulted in adverse im...
Tasmania is rich in endemic, ancient lineages of plant and animal species, which form distinctive co...
This report examines the response to, and lessons learnt from, recent fires in remote Tasmanian wild...
The temperate island of Tasmania is a global centre of plant endemism, with relictual lineages that ...
The montane area of the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area was recently burnt by large fires i...
Aim: To assess the long-term impacts of landscape fire on a mosaic of pyrophobic and pyrogenic woody...
AimTo assess the long-term impacts of landscape fire on a mosaic of pyrophobic and pyrogenic woody m...
© 2019 Sarah CooleyThe predicted increase of climate-driven wildfires poses a threat to the endemic ...
Copyright © 2019 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Tasmania's montane temperate rainforests contain some of ...
The World Heritage listed landscapes of southwest Tasmania are an ideal model system for investigati...
Untangling the nuanced relationships between landscape, fire disturbance, human agency, and climate ...
Western Tasmania, Australia contains some of the highest levels of biological endemism of any temper...
The Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area has ecosystems and cultural landscapes that have been c...
The Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area (TWWHA) has globally significant natural and cultural v...
The Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area (TWWHA) has globally significant natural and cultural v...
In many natural areas, changes in fire regimes since European settlement have resulted in adverse im...
Tasmania is rich in endemic, ancient lineages of plant and animal species, which form distinctive co...
This report examines the response to, and lessons learnt from, recent fires in remote Tasmanian wild...
The temperate island of Tasmania is a global centre of plant endemism, with relictual lineages that ...
The montane area of the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area was recently burnt by large fires i...
Aim: To assess the long-term impacts of landscape fire on a mosaic of pyrophobic and pyrogenic woody...
AimTo assess the long-term impacts of landscape fire on a mosaic of pyrophobic and pyrogenic woody m...
© 2019 Sarah CooleyThe predicted increase of climate-driven wildfires poses a threat to the endemic ...
Copyright © 2019 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Tasmania's montane temperate rainforests contain some of ...
The World Heritage listed landscapes of southwest Tasmania are an ideal model system for investigati...
Untangling the nuanced relationships between landscape, fire disturbance, human agency, and climate ...
Western Tasmania, Australia contains some of the highest levels of biological endemism of any temper...