Authors
Justin J Perry, Garry D Cook, Erin Graham, CP Mick Meyer, Helen T Murphy, Jeremy VanDerWal
Publication date
2019/10/31
Journal
International Journal of Wildland Fire
Volume
29
Issue
1
Pages
1-10
Publisher
CSIRO PUBLISHING
Description
Australia’s northern savannas have among the highest fire frequencies in the world. The climate is monsoonal, with a long, dry season of up to 9 months, during which most fires occur. The Australian Government’s Emissions Reduction Fund allows land managers to generate carbon credits by abating the direct emissions of CO2 equivalent gases via prescribed burning that shifts the fire regime from predominantly large, high-intensity late dry season fires to a more benign, early dry season fire regime. However, the Australian savannas are vast and there is significant variation in weather conditions and seasonality, which is likely to result in spatial and temporal variations in the commencement and length of late dry season conditions. Here, we assess the temporal and spatial consistency of the commencement of late dry season conditions, defined as those months that maximise fire size and where the most …
Total citations
2020202120222023202437772
Scholar articles
JJ Perry, GD Cook, E Graham, CPM Meyer, HT Murphy… - International Journal of Wildland Fire, 2019