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Wildlife Research Wildlife Research Society
Ecology, management and conservation in natural and modified habitats

Just Accepted

This article has been peer reviewed and accepted for publication. It is in production and has not been edited, so may differ from the final published form.

Pirra Jungku, Pirra Warlu: Using traditional fire practice knowledge and contemporary science to guide fire management goals for desert animals

Sarah Legge 0000-0001-6968-2781, Hamsini Bijlani, Karajarri Rangers, Ngurrara Rangers, Braedan Taylor, Jacqueline Shovellor, Frankie McCarthy, Chantelle Murray, Jesse Ala'i, Courtney Brown, Kevin Tromp, Sam Bayley, Ewan Noakes, Jackie Wemyss, Hannah Cliff, Nigel Jackett, Bruce Greatwich, Ben Corey, Mark Cowan, Kristina Macdonald 0000-0003-0357-1231, Brett Murphy, Sam Banks, Malcolm Lindsay 0000-0001-9683-8331

Abstract

Context: Indigenous people influenced fire in Australia’s deserts for millennia, until colonisation interrupted traditional fire practices. Many groups are reinvigorating those practices to achieve inter-linked biodiversity, cultural, and social benefits. Contemporary fire management integrates modern planning and delivery approaches with cultural process. However, deserts have changed since colonisation (e.g., invasive species, biodiversity loss, climate change) and fire management outcomes for Country are less certain. Some Indigenous groups are integrating scientific methods into their programs, to examine biodiversity outcomes and refine management. Aims: Karajarri and Ngurrara Traditional Owners wanted to understand how fire affects Kuwi (mammals, reptiles) on their Country, to guide fire management. Karajarri and Ngurrara rangers worked together on this project, exchanging skills and knowledge with each other, and with scientists. Methods: We established 32 monitoring sites at four locations on Karajarri and Ngurrara Country. We underook 11 survey trips from 2018-2022, gathering data from 81 site-visits. Using Landsat satellite imagery we described fire patterns around each site, focussing on seral stage (as defined by Traditional Owners), patch size, and seral diversity at small (500 m), medium (1 km), and large (5 km) spatial scales. Results: There were 378 mammal captures (11 species) and 3392 reptile captures (66 species). Mammal species richness and captures were lowest in Wuntara (recently burnt) and highest in Nyirrinyanu (mature) spinifex. Mammal species richness increased with seral diversity within 1 km around the trapping site. Reptile species richness and captures were unaffected by seral stage. However, many species were caught significantly more often in specific seral stages. Neither reptile richness nor capture rate were related to patch size or seral diversity. Conclusions: Retaining a mix of seral stages can maintain diverse reptile and mammal assemblages. The management challenge will be increasing the extent of mature/long-unburnt spinifex, currently the rarest seral stage. Ranger fire management has already reduced mean fire size by 40-52 %, and further reductions are possible. Implications Our work improves the understanding of fire effects on northern desert fauna; guides management; provides important ecological information from a little-studied region of Australia’s deserts; and increases the recognition of Indigenous conservation management of Country.

WR24069  Accepted 15 August 2024

© CSIRO 2024

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