Indigenous groups are increasingly combining traditional ecological knowledge and Western scientific approaches to inform the management of their lands. We report the outcomes of a collaborative research project focused on key ecological questions associated with monsoon vine thickets in Wunambal Gaambera country (Kimberley region, Western Australia). The study mapped monsoon rainforests and analysed the environmental correlates of their current distribution, as well as the historical drivers of patch dynamics since 1949. Remote sensing was used to chart the effectiveness of an intervention designed to re-instate Aboriginal fire regimes according to customary principles. We identified the most vulnerable patches based on size, distance from...
The ‘savanna fire management and BNH scenario planning for northern Australia’ project i...
The decline of Northern Cypress Pine (Callitris intratropica) throughout the tropical savannas of no...
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...
Rainforests and savannas are floristically and structurally distinct vegetation types which, within ...
Aim To compare fire behaviour and fire management practice at a site managed continuously by traditi...
Fire is a dominant feature of tropical savannas throughout the world, and provides a unique opportun...
Aims: To detect changes in area and vegetation dynamics of monsoon rain forests in relation to distu...
The small rainforest fragments found in savanna landscapes are powerful, yet often overlooked, model...
Aim: To assess hypotheses about the role of anthropogenic fire in the maintenance and origin of a fi...
Knowledge of historic indigenous management practices in north Australian tropical savannas can bene...
We compared measures of ecosystem state across six adjacent land-tenure groups in the intact tropica...
Changes to Aboriginal fire regimes since European occupation are thought to have affected the range ...
Aim: Deliver research infrastructure to inform how to effectively manage imposed fire regimes in tro...
Although contemporary fire regimes in fire-prone Australian savannas are recognised as having major ...
The ‘savanna fire management and BNH scenario planning for northern Australia’ project i...
The decline of Northern Cypress Pine (Callitris intratropica) throughout the tropical savannas of no...
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...
Rainforests and savannas are floristically and structurally distinct vegetation types which, within ...
Aim To compare fire behaviour and fire management practice at a site managed continuously by traditi...
Fire is a dominant feature of tropical savannas throughout the world, and provides a unique opportun...
Aims: To detect changes in area and vegetation dynamics of monsoon rain forests in relation to distu...
The small rainforest fragments found in savanna landscapes are powerful, yet often overlooked, model...
Aim: To assess hypotheses about the role of anthropogenic fire in the maintenance and origin of a fi...
Knowledge of historic indigenous management practices in north Australian tropical savannas can bene...
We compared measures of ecosystem state across six adjacent land-tenure groups in the intact tropica...
Changes to Aboriginal fire regimes since European occupation are thought to have affected the range ...
Aim: Deliver research infrastructure to inform how to effectively manage imposed fire regimes in tro...
Although contemporary fire regimes in fire-prone Australian savannas are recognised as having major ...
The ‘savanna fire management and BNH scenario planning for northern Australia’ project i...
The decline of Northern Cypress Pine (Callitris intratropica) throughout the tropical savannas of no...
Aim To describe the nexus between Aboriginal landscape burning and patterns of habitat use by kangar...