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Shrubland ecosystems are often inherently flammable due to a canopy structure favourable for fire propagation. At the same time, the fuel bed is not s...
Read moreColonization by woody plants is often very slow or absent on grasslands occupying degraded land in the tropics. Seed dispersal limitation is widely re...
Read moreMore than a century of forest management, including fire exclusion, livestock grazing and tree harvesting, may have affected forest structure and comp...
Read moreThe regeneration potential of oak following a disturbance or harvest that initiates stand regeneration is determined largely by the size structure of ...
Read moreManaging fire to achieve hazard reduction while providing for biodiversity conservation is complex in fire-prone regions. This challenge is exacerbate...
Read moreIndigenous people have been managing fire-prone landscapes for millennia, especially in tropical savannas, thereby maintaining carbon stocks and pyrod...
Read moreVariation in fire characteristics, termed pyrodiversity, plays an important role in structuring post-fire communities, but little is known about the i...
Read moreA 15-year fire history (1980-94) was assembled for Kakadu National Park, a 20 000 km2 World Heritage property in monsoonal northern Australia, based o...
Read moreLand use (e.g. urbanization, agriculture, natural lands management) may directly affect populations by habitat loss and fragmentation, and indirectly ...
Read moreVariability in historic fire regimes in eastern North America resulted in an array of oak savannas, woodlands and forests that were dominant vegetatio...
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