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International Journal of Wildland Fire International Journal of Wildland Fire Society
Journal of the International Association of Wildland Fire
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International Journal of Wildland Fire

International Journal of Wildland Fire

Volume 33 Number 6 2024

WF23120Evaluation and comparison of simple empirical models for dead fuel moisture content

Jason J. Sharples 0000-0002-7816-6989, P. Jyoteeshkumar Reddy 0000-0001-9490-2483, Victor Resco de Dios, Rachael H. Nolan 0000-0001-9277-5142, Matthias M. Boer and Ross A. Bradstock

Five models for the moisture content of fine dead fuels were evaluated using empirical datasets. Simple functions of the difference between air temperature and relative humidity were shown to perform as well as, if not better than exponential models based on vapour pressure deficit.

WF23177Uncharted territory: governance opportunities for wildfire management and the case of Cyprus

Judith A. Kirschner 0000-0002-2720-165X, Toddi A. Steelman 0000-0001-7492-8635, Iris Charalambidou 0000-0003-3154-4169, Salih Gücel 0000-0001-5331-8379, Petros Petrou 0000-0002-5638-7174, Kostakis Papageorgiou, Achilleas Karayiannis and George Boustras 0000-0003-2133-9575

Global change is pushing fire activity and impact beyond known trajectories. We reviewed the literature to bring forward five themes of attention for governance systems. The initial framing was then applied to the case of Cyprus, to exemplify the potential and urgency for change in wildfire thinking and action globally.

WF23130Remote sensing applications for prescribed burn research

Anna LoPresti 0000-0003-4801-1529, Meghan T. Hayden 0000-0003-2929-1078, Katherine Siegel 0000-0001-6294-2130, Benjamin Poulter 0000-0002-9493-8600, E. Natasha Stavros 0000-0001-6657-7310 and Laura E. Dee 0000-0003-0471-1371

Remote sensing is frequently used in fire ecology and management, but its applications for prescribed burning are not well established. We review studies that use remote sensing for prescribed burn research, finding that wildfire remote sensing approaches are not optimised for small, short-duration and low-severity burns typical of prescribed fire.

We propose a method to identify the climate window when prescribed burning in Tasmania, Australia is unlikely to lead to organic soil combustion, using observations of when organic soil fires occurred, and vegetation is dry enough to burn.

Reptile responses to fire are poorly understood in urban remnants. We examined reptile responses in the first 15 years post-fire and compared them to studies in contiguous vegetation. There were no long-term impacts of fire on reptiles after 3 years post-fire.

WF23159Multi-century times-since-fire and prior fire interval determine biomass carbon stocks in obligate-seeder eucalypt woodlands

Carl R. Gosper 0000-0002-0962-5117, Colin J. Yates, Georg Wiehl, Alison O’Donnell and Suzanne M. Prober

Quantifying the effect of time-since-fire and prior fire interval on biomass carbon.

Fire regimes can have a significant bearing on terrestrial carbon stocks, with carbon markets potentially providing a mechanism to support land management activities. We quantify the effect of time-since-fire and prior fire interval on biomass carbon in the world’s largest extant Mediterranean-climate woodland, located in south-western Australia. Photographs by C. Gosper.

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