Long-Term Response of Fuel to Mechanical Mastication in South-Eastern Australia

被引:5
作者
Pickering, Bianca J. [1 ]
Burton, Jamie E. [2 ]
Penman, Trent D. [2 ]
Grant, Madeleine A. [3 ]
Cawson, Jane G. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Melbourne, Sch Ecosyst & Forest Sci, Fac Sci, 500 Yarra Blvd, Burnley, Vic 3121, Australia
[2] Univ Melbourne, Sch Ecosyst & Forest Sci, Fac Sci, 4 Water St, Creswick, Vic 3363, Australia
[3] Dept Environm Land Water & Planning, 110 Natimuk Rd, Horsham, Vic 3400, Australia
来源
FIRE-SWITZERLAND | 2022年 / 5卷 / 03期
关键词
aridity; coarse fraction; fuel management; mulching; surface fuel load; shrub encroachment; weeds; wildfire risk; PRESCRIBED FIRE; SHRUB RECOVERY; VEGETATION; DECOMPOSITION; CALIFORNIA; FOREST; PLANT; LANDSCAPE; GRADIENTS; DYNAMICS;
D O I
10.3390/fire5030076
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Mechanical mastication is a fuel management strategy that modifies vegetation structure to reduce the impact of wildfire. Although past research has quantified immediate changes to fuel post-mastication, few studies consider longer-term fuel trajectories and climatic drivers of this change. Our study sought to quantify changes to fuel loads and structure over time following mastication and as a function of landscape aridity. Measurements were made at 63 sites in Victoria, Australia. All sites had been masticated within the previous 9 years to remove over-abundant shrubs and small trees. We used generalised additive models to explore trends over time and along an aridity gradient. Surface fuel loads were highest immediately post-mastication and in the most arid sites. The surface fine fuel load declined over time, whereas the surface coarse fuel load remained high; these trends occurred irrespective of landscape aridity. Standing fuel (understorey and midstorey vegetation) regenerated consistently, but shrub cover was still substantially low at 9 years post-mastication. Fire managers need to consider the trade-off between a persistently higher surface coarse fuel load and reduced shrub cover to evaluate the efficacy of mastication for fuel management. Coarse fuel may increase soil heating and smoke emissions, but less shrub cover will likely moderate fire behaviour.
引用
收藏
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Testate amoebae as a hydrological proxy for reconstructing water-table depth in the mires of south-eastern Australia
    Zheng, Xianglin
    Amesbury, Matthew J.
    Hope, Geoffrey
    Martin, Len F.
    Mooney, Scott D.
    ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS, 2019, 96 : 701 - 710
  • [42] VEGETATION OF THE EDEN REGION, SOUTH-EASTERN AUSTRALIA - SPECIES COMPOSITION, DIVERSITY AND STRUCTURE
    KEITH, DA
    SANDERS, JM
    JOURNAL OF VEGETATION SCIENCE, 1990, 1 (02) : 203 - 232
  • [43] Diversity of Backusella (Mucoromycotina) in south-eastern Australia revealed through polyphasic taxonomy
    Urquhart, A. S.
    Douch, J. K.
    Heafield, T. A.
    Buddie, A. G.
    Idnurm, A.
    PERSOONIA, 2021, 46 : 1 - 25
  • [44] Early evacuation is the best bushfire risk mitigation strategy for south-eastern Australia
    Venn, Tyron J.
    Quiggin, John
    AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND RESOURCE ECONOMICS, 2017, 61 (03) : 481 - 497
  • [45] A new perspective on Late Eocene and Oligocene vegetation and paleoclimates of South-eastern Australia
    Sluiter, Ian R. K.
    Holdgate, Guy R.
    Reichgelt, Tammo
    Greenwood, David R.
    Kershaw, A. Peter
    Schultz, Nick L.
    PALAEOGEOGRAPHY PALAEOCLIMATOLOGY PALAEOECOLOGY, 2022, 596
  • [46] Developing and testing models of the drivers of anthropogenic and lightning-caused wildfire ignitions in south-eastern Australia
    Clarke, Hamish
    Gibson, Rebecca
    Cirulis, Brett
    Bradstock, Ross A.
    Penman, Trent D.
    JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, 2019, 235 : 34 - 41
  • [47] The impact of fire regimes on populations of an endangered lizard in montane south-eastern Australia
    Gorissen, Sarsha
    Mallinson, Jacqueline
    Greenlees, Matthew
    Shine, Richard
    AUSTRAL ECOLOGY, 2015, 40 (02) : 170 - 177
  • [48] Divergent responses of fire to recent warming and drying across south-eastern Australia
    Bradstock, Ross
    Penman, Trent
    Boer, Matthias
    Price, Owen
    Clarke, Hamish
    GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2014, 20 (05) : 1412 - 1428
  • [49] Long-term avian response to fire severity, repeated burning, and mechanical fuel reduction in upland hardwood forest
    Greenberg, Cathryn H.
    Tomcho, Joseph
    Livings-Tomcho, Aimee
    Lanham, J. Drew
    Waldrop, Thomas A.
    Simon, Dean
    Hagan, Donald
    FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, 2018, 424 : 367 - 377
  • [50] Stability and storage of soil organic carbon in a heavy-textured Karst soil from south-eastern Australia
    Hobley, Eleanor
    Willgoose, Garry R.
    Frisia, Silvia
    Jacobsen, Geraldine
    SOIL RESEARCH, 2014, 52 (05) : 476 - 482