Rangeland Ecology & Management

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Fire management for biodiversity conservation : Key research questions and our capacity to answer them
Author
Driscoll, Don A
Lindenmayer, David B
Bennett, Andrew F
Bode, Michael
Bradstock, Ross A
Cary, Geoffrey J
Clarke, Michael F
Dexter, Nick
Fensham, Rod
Friend, Gordon
Gill, Malcolm
James, Stewart
Kay, Geoff
Keith, David A
MacGregor, Christopher
Russell-Smith, Jeremy
Salt, David
Watson, James E M
Williams, Richard J
York, Alan
Publisher
Biological Conservation
Publication Year
2010
Body

Knowing how species respond to fire regimes is essential for ecologically sustainable management. This axiom raises two important questions: (1) what knowledge is the most important to develop and (2) to what extent can current research methods deliver that knowledge? We identify three areas of required knowledge: (i) a mechanistic understanding of species 039; responses to fire regimes; (ii) knowledge of how the spatial and temporal arrangement of fires influences the biota; and (iii) an understanding of interactions of fire regimes with other processes. We review the capacity of empirical research to address these knowledge gaps, and reveal many limitations. Manipulative experiments are limited by the number and scope of treatments that can be applied, natural experiments are limited by treatment availability and confounding factors, and longitudinal studies are difficult to maintain, particularly due to unplanned disturbance events. Simulation modelling is limited by the quality of the underlying empirical data and by uncertainty in how well model structure represents reality. Due to the constraints on large-scale, long-term research, the potential for management experiments to inform adaptive management is limited. Rather than simply recommending adaptive management, we define a research agenda to maximise the rate of learning in this difficult field. This includes measuring responses at a species level, building capacity to implement natural experiments, undertaking simulation modelling, and judicious application of experimental approaches. Developing ecologically sustainable fire management practices will require sustained research effort and a sophisticated research agenda based on carefully targeting appropriate methods to address critical management questions.

Language
English
Resource Type
Text
Document Type
Journal Issue/Article
Journal Volume
143
Journal Number
9
Journal Pages
1928-1939
Journal Name
Biological Conservation
Keywords
Planned burn
prescribed fire
wildfire
Policy Implications
Management actions
fire ecology
management
biodiversity