Fire is a dominant feature of tropical savannas throughout the world, and provides a unique opportunity for habitat management at the landscape scale. We provide the background and methodology for a landscape-scale savanna fire experiment at Kapalga, located in Kakadu National Park in the seasonal tropics of northern Australia. The experiment addresses the limitations of previous savanna fire experiments, including inappropriately small sizes of experimental units, lack of replication, consideration of a narrow range of ecological responses and an absence of detailed measurement of fire behaviour. In contrast to those elsewhere in the world, Australia\u27s savannas are sparsely populated and largely uncleared, with fires lit primarily in a ...
Indigenous groups are increasingly combining traditional ecological knowledge and Western scientific...
Aim: Many tropical savannas are undergoing a trend of increasing woody biomass, or 'woody thickening...
© 2014 The Authors. Global Change Biology Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. Savanna ecosystems com...
The decline of Northern Cypress Pine (Callitris intratropica) throughout the tropical savannas of no...
Changes in plant abundance within a eucalypt savanna of north-eastern Australia were studied using a...
Aim To compare fire behaviour and fire management practice at a site managed continuously by traditi...
This study aimed to quantify changes in fire severity resulting from the invasion of Australia\u27s ...
1. How tree cover in tropical savannas changes through time and space is a major unresolved issue in...
The savannas of northern Australia are the most fire-prone part of a fire-prone continent. The savan...
Aim: Deliver research infrastructure to inform how to effectively manage imposed fire regimes in tro...
Fire is probably the greatest natural and anthropogenic environmental disturbance in Australian trop...
Tropical and semi-arid savannas are extremely fire prone (Lawes, 2011) with dry season fires being a...
Research ArticleUnderstanding fine-scale fire patchiness has significant implications for ecologic...
Fire is a significant determinant of vegetation structure in Australia’s savannas and has been impli...
A long-term (1993–2013) experiment in grazed semiarid tropical savannas in northern Australia tested...
Indigenous groups are increasingly combining traditional ecological knowledge and Western scientific...
Aim: Many tropical savannas are undergoing a trend of increasing woody biomass, or 'woody thickening...
© 2014 The Authors. Global Change Biology Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. Savanna ecosystems com...
The decline of Northern Cypress Pine (Callitris intratropica) throughout the tropical savannas of no...
Changes in plant abundance within a eucalypt savanna of north-eastern Australia were studied using a...
Aim To compare fire behaviour and fire management practice at a site managed continuously by traditi...
This study aimed to quantify changes in fire severity resulting from the invasion of Australia\u27s ...
1. How tree cover in tropical savannas changes through time and space is a major unresolved issue in...
The savannas of northern Australia are the most fire-prone part of a fire-prone continent. The savan...
Aim: Deliver research infrastructure to inform how to effectively manage imposed fire regimes in tro...
Fire is probably the greatest natural and anthropogenic environmental disturbance in Australian trop...
Tropical and semi-arid savannas are extremely fire prone (Lawes, 2011) with dry season fires being a...
Research ArticleUnderstanding fine-scale fire patchiness has significant implications for ecologic...
Fire is a significant determinant of vegetation structure in Australia’s savannas and has been impli...
A long-term (1993–2013) experiment in grazed semiarid tropical savannas in northern Australia tested...
Indigenous groups are increasingly combining traditional ecological knowledge and Western scientific...
Aim: Many tropical savannas are undergoing a trend of increasing woody biomass, or 'woody thickening...
© 2014 The Authors. Global Change Biology Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. Savanna ecosystems com...