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Australian Journal of Botany Australian Journal of Botany Society
Southern hemisphere botanical ecosystems
RESEARCH FRONT

Fire in Australia: how was the biota prepared for human occupation?

Robert S. Hill A C and Gregory J. Jordan B
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A School of Biological Sciences, The University of Adelaide, SA 5005, Australia.

B School of Biological Sciences, University of Tasmania, Private Bag 55, Hobart, Tas, 7001, Australia.

C Correpsonding author. Email: bob.hill@adelaide.edu.au




Professor Bob Hill is Executive Dean of the Faculty of Sciences and Director of the Environment Institute at the University of Adelaide. He is also Head of Science at the South Australian Museum. His research interests focus on the evolution of the Australian vegetation over the last 60 million years, a period of time that saw most major aspects of the living vegetation come into existence. His particular research focus has been on the major Southern Hemisphere angiosperm genus Nothofagus and the evolution and distribution of the southern conifers. He has an ongoing interest in the interactions between soil nutrients, water availability and fire on the evolution of the living Australian vegetation. He has edited four books and has over 250 scientific publications.



Associate Professor Greg Jordan is a research/teaching academic at the University of Tasmania, in the School of Biological Sciences in the Faculty of Science, Engineering and Technology. For the last 25 years he has been using evidence from fossils, geographic distributions, ecology, phylogeny and physiology to study plant evolution and biogeography, especially of the southern hemisphere.

Australian Journal of Botany 64(8) 555-556 https://doi.org/10.1071/BTv64n8_ED1
Published: 19 December 2016

In December 2015 the Ecological Society of Australia held their Annual meeting in Adelaide, and one of us (RSH) organised a symposium as part of that meeting titled ‘Fire in Australia: how was the biota prepared for human occupation?’ Most of the talks from this symposium are presented in this Special Issue of the Australian Journal of Botany. The talks covered a wide time span and many important issues. Most dealt directly with the interactions between plants and fire and how these interactions impacted in the very long-term on the response of individual species, and inevitably the makeup of the vegetation, and the potential impacts of early Aboriginal people on the Australian environment.

The papers highlight a set of interesting recent developments that open the opportunity for innovative research in the future. The topics covered are lively and indeed controversial in Australian plant science. Of particular note is how we use the fossil record. The growing global evidence for high charcoal levels in Cretaceous fossil deposits is at last beginning to be matched by records from Australia, due to some very specific searching for fossil-bearing sediments of the right age (Carpenter et al. 2016). If more of these important sediments can be found we may learn a great deal about the early history of the characteristic Australian scleromorphic vegetation, as discussed by Hill and Jordan (2016). The remarkable discovery of very well preserved Eocene (53 Ma) eucalypt macrofossils in southern South America poses some very challenging questions about the origin of this taxon and the role of fire in its early evolution, as considered in detail in the context of fossil pollen (Macphail and Thornhill 2016) and macrofossils (Hill et al. 2016). For many years now the Latrobe Valley coal deposits have been the source of one of the most detailed reconstructions of the potential interactions of Australian plants species with fire, before the arrival of humans. It is now clear that the vegetation history in these coals was much more complex than has previously been reported (Sluiter et al. 2016); we have much still to learn about how fire impacted on the vegetation in these megaswamps. Aboriginal people arrived in Australia during the Pleistocene, and this Special Issue addresses the hot topics of the impacts of early humans on fire–vegetation interactions (Foreman 2016) and fire–vegetation–fauna interactions (Johnson 2016).

For the last few decades there has been a general view that we had a strong broad understanding of how the modern Australian vegetation evolved on an isolated continent. The major drivers of the species evolution that led to the modern vegetation were soil nutrients, water availability and temperature, with all three impacting on fire frequency and intensity. This broad view of the important factors in the evolution of the vegetation has not changed, but important evidence is accumulating to demonstrate that we are a long way from a clear understanding of the history of the vegetation of our continent. This Special Issue goes some way towards redefining some of the important and controversial questions that are still to be to be addressed.



References

Carpenter RJ, Holman AI, Abell AD, Grice K (2016) Cretaceous fire in Australia: a review with new geochemical evidence, and relevance to the rise of the angiosperms. Australian Journal of Botany 64, 564–578.
Cretaceous fire in Australia: a review with new geochemical evidence, and relevance to the rise of the angiosperms.Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

Foreman P (2016) A framework for testing the influence of Aboriginal burning on grassy ecosystems in lowland, mesic south-eastern Australia. Australian Journal of Botany 64, 626–642.
A framework for testing the influence of Aboriginal burning on grassy ecosystems in lowland, mesic south-eastern Australia.Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

Hill RS, Jordan GJ (2016) Deep history of wildfire in Australia. Australian Journal of Botany 64, 557–563.
Deep history of wildfire in Australia.Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

Hill RS, Beer Y, Hill K, Maciunas E, Tarran M, Wainman C (2016) Evolution of the eucalypts – an interpretation from the macrofossil record. Australian Journal of Botany 64, 600–608.
Evolution of the eucalypts – an interpretation from the macrofossil record.Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

Johnson CN (2016) Fire, people and ecosystem change in Pleistocene Australia. Australian Journal of Botany 64, 643–651.
Fire, people and ecosystem change in Pleistocene Australia.Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

Macphail MK, Thornhill A (2016) How old are the eucalypts? A review of the microfossil and phylogenetic evidence. Australian Journal of Botany 64, 579–599.
How old are the eucalypts? A review of the microfossil and phylogenetic evidence.Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

Sluiter I, Blackburn DT, Holdgate G (2016) Fire and Late Oligocene to Mid-Miocene peat mega-swamps of south-eastern Australia: a floristic and palaeoclimatic interpretation. Australian Journal of Botany 64, 609–625.
Fire and Late Oligocene to Mid-Miocene peat mega-swamps of south-eastern Australia: a floristic and palaeoclimatic interpretation.Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |