Fire has long been a principal tool for manipulating ecosystems, notably for pastoralist cultures, but in modern times, fire use has often been a source of conflicts with state bureaucracies. Despite this, traditional fire management practices have rarely been examined from a perspective of fire behavior and fire effects, which hampers dialogue on management options. In order to analyze the rationale for fire use, its practical handling, and ecological effects in high-elevation ericaceous heathlands in Ethiopia, we used three different information sources: interviews with pastoralists, field observations of fires, and analysis of vegetation age structure at the landscape level. The interviews revealed three primary reasons for burning: incr...
Prescribed fire is commonly applied world-wide as a tool for enhancing habitats and altering resourc...
Fire is the most frequent disturbance in the Ericaceous Belt (ca 3000–4300 m.a.s.l.), one of the mos...
To the best of our knowledge, one or more authors of this paper were federal employees when contribu...
Fire has long been a principal tool for manipulating ecosystems, notably for pastoralist cultures, b...
Pastoralists frequently depend on fire to produce forage for their livestock, but traditional burnin...
In flammable shrublands fire size often depends on local management. Policy and land use change can ...
Fire is one of the major ecological factors that determines structure and function of grassland and ...
This thesis investigates the effects of fire on quality and quantity of forage for grazers in the sa...
The implementation of a new prescribed fire program to restore bush-encroached rangelands in souther...
This thesis investigates the effects of fire on quality and quantity of forage for grazers in the sa...
Aims Tropical tree lines are often associated with abrupt shifts in vegetation, soils and disturbanc...
This study aimed to determine vegetation structure, species diversity and aboveground herbaceous bio...
Fire is critical to the maintenance of biodiversity and ecological processes and contributes to the ...
Fires have burned in African landscapes for more than a hundred million years, long before vertebrat...
A serious bush encroachment problem has developed in the Eastern Cape and it has been suggested that...
Prescribed fire is commonly applied world-wide as a tool for enhancing habitats and altering resourc...
Fire is the most frequent disturbance in the Ericaceous Belt (ca 3000–4300 m.a.s.l.), one of the mos...
To the best of our knowledge, one or more authors of this paper were federal employees when contribu...
Fire has long been a principal tool for manipulating ecosystems, notably for pastoralist cultures, b...
Pastoralists frequently depend on fire to produce forage for their livestock, but traditional burnin...
In flammable shrublands fire size often depends on local management. Policy and land use change can ...
Fire is one of the major ecological factors that determines structure and function of grassland and ...
This thesis investigates the effects of fire on quality and quantity of forage for grazers in the sa...
The implementation of a new prescribed fire program to restore bush-encroached rangelands in souther...
This thesis investigates the effects of fire on quality and quantity of forage for grazers in the sa...
Aims Tropical tree lines are often associated with abrupt shifts in vegetation, soils and disturbanc...
This study aimed to determine vegetation structure, species diversity and aboveground herbaceous bio...
Fire is critical to the maintenance of biodiversity and ecological processes and contributes to the ...
Fires have burned in African landscapes for more than a hundred million years, long before vertebrat...
A serious bush encroachment problem has developed in the Eastern Cape and it has been suggested that...
Prescribed fire is commonly applied world-wide as a tool for enhancing habitats and altering resourc...
Fire is the most frequent disturbance in the Ericaceous Belt (ca 3000–4300 m.a.s.l.), one of the mos...
To the best of our knowledge, one or more authors of this paper were federal employees when contribu...