Challenges For Prescribed Fire Management In Australia'S Fire-Prone Rangelands - The Example Of The Northern Territory

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF WILDLAND FIRE(2020)

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摘要
Northern Australia comprises by far the most fire-prone-half of a fiery continent, where fire frequencies range from annual in the tropical savannas to periodic very-extensive fire events following above-rainfall conditions in the central Australian rangelands. As illustration of the challenges facing effective fire management in Australia's 5.7 x 10(6) km(2) rangelands, we examine the status of contemporary prescribed burning activities in the Northern Territory, a 1.4 x 10(6) km(2), very sparsely settled (0.18 persons km(-2)) jurisdiction characterised by vast flammable landscapes, few barriers to fire-spread, predominantly anthropogenic ignitions, and limited institutional resources and capacity. Unsurprisingly, prescribed-fire management is shown to be restricted to specific locales. For more effective, landscape-scale fire management, potential solutions include engagement with dispersed remote communities and incorporation of Indigenous Ranger Groups into the fire-management network, and building on the success of savanna-burning greenhouse gas emission projects as an example for incentivising landscape fire and emergency management services generally. Recently, significant steps have been taken towards implementing formal regional fire-management planning processes involving inclusive community-stakeholder engagement, and the setting of clearly defined time-constrained objectives and targets.
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关键词
central Australia, emergency management, fire regime, Indigenous rangers, remote communities, risk management, savannas
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