Severe and Short Interval Fires Rearrange Dry Forest Fuel Arrays in South-Eastern Australia

Journal article


Gordon, Christopher E., Nolan, Rachael H., Boer, Matthias M., Bendall, Eli R., Williamson, Jane S., Price, Owen F., Kenny, Belinda J., Taylor, Jennifer Elizabeth, Denham, Andrew and Bradstock, Ross A.. (2024). Severe and Short Interval Fires Rearrange Dry Forest Fuel Arrays in South-Eastern Australia. Fire. 7(4), pp. 1-16. https://doi.org/10.3390/fire7040130
AuthorsGordon, Christopher E., Nolan, Rachael H., Boer, Matthias M., Bendall, Eli R., Williamson, Jane S., Price, Owen F., Kenny, Belinda J., Taylor, Jennifer Elizabeth, Denham, Andrew and Bradstock, Ross A.
Abstract

Fire regimes have shaped extant vegetation communities, and subsequently fuel arrays, in fire-prone landscapes. Understanding how resilient fuel arrays are to fire regime attributes will be key for future fire management actions, given global fire regime shifts. We use a network of 63-field sites across the Sydney Basin Bioregion (Australia) to quantify how fire interval (short: last three fires <10 years apart, long: last two fires >10 years apart) and severity (low: understorey canopy scorched, high: understorey and overstorey canopy scorched), impacted fuel attribute values 2.5 years after Australia’s 2019–2020 Black Summer fires. Tree bark fuel hazard, herbaceous (near-surface fuels; grasses, sedges <50 cm height) fuel hazard, and ground litter (surface fuels) fuel cover and load were higher in areas burned by low- rather than high-severity fire. Conversely, midstorey (elevated fuels: shrubs, trees 50 cm–200 m in height) fuel cover and hazard were higher in areas burned by high- rather than low-severity fire. Elevated fuel cover, vertical connectivity, height and fuel hazard were also higher at long rather than short fire intervals. Our results provide strong evidence that fire regimes rearrange fuel arrays in the years following fire, which suggests that future fire regime shifts may alter fuel states, with important implications for fuel and fire management.

Keywordsfire interval; fuel severity; fire regime; fuel; Sydney Basin Bioregion
Year01 Jan 2024
JournalFire
Journal citation7 (4), pp. 1-16
PublisherMDPI AG
ISSN2571-6255
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.3390/fire7040130
Web address (URL)https://www.mdpi.com/2571-6255/7/4/130
Open accessPublished as ‘gold’ (paid) open access
Research or scholarlyResearch
Page range1-16
Publisher's version
License
File Access Level
Open
Output statusPublished
Publication dates
Online10 Apr 2024
Publication process dates
Accepted04 Apr 2024
Deposited26 Aug 2024
Additional information

© 2024 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.

This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license ( https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ ).

Place of publicationSwitzerland
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