Optimal Fire Regimes for Soil Carbon Storage in Tropical Savannas of Northern Australia
Published 2011 View Full Article
- Home
- Publications
- Publication Search
- Publication Details
Title
Optimal Fire Regimes for Soil Carbon Storage in Tropical Savannas of Northern Australia
Authors
Keywords
-
Journal
ECOSYSTEMS
Volume 14, Issue 3, Pages 503-518
Publisher
Springer Nature
Online
2011-03-17
DOI
10.1007/s10021-011-9428-8
References
Ask authors/readers for more resources
Related references
Note: Only part of the references are listed.- Soil seed banks confer resilience to savanna grass-layer plants during seasonal disturbance
- (2010) Kenneth Scott et al. ACTA OECOLOGICA-INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY
- A biogeographic model of fire regimes in Australia: current and future implications
- (2010) R. A. Bradstock GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY
- Fire severity in a northern Australian savanna landscape: the importance of time since previous fire
- (2010) Brett P. Murphy et al. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF WILDLAND FIRE
- Fire regimes, fire-sensitive vegetation and fire management of the sandstone Arnhem Plateau, monsoonal northern Australia
- (2010) JEREMY RUSSELL-SMITH et al. JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY
- Frequent fire affects soil nitrogen and carbon in an African savanna by changing woody cover
- (2010) Corli Coetsee et al. OECOLOGIA
- A review of sampling designs for the measurement of soil organic carbon in Australian grazing lands
- (2010) D. E. Allen et al. RANGELAND JOURNAL
- InvasiveAndropogon gayanus(gamba grass) is an ecosystem transformer of nitrogen relations in Australian savanna
- (2009) N. A. Rossiter-Rachor et al. ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS
- Forest structure, habitat and carbon benefits from thinning floodplain forests: Managing early stand density makes a difference
- (2009) Gillis J. Horner et al. FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT
- What limits fire? An examination of drivers of burnt area in Southern Africa
- (2009) SALLY ARCHIBALD et al. GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
- Frequent fires reduce tree growth in northern Australian savannas: implications for tree demography and carbon sequestration
- (2009) BRETT P. MURPHY et al. GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
- Improving estimates of savanna burning emissions for greenhouse accounting in northern Australia: limitations, challenges, applications
- (2009) Jeremy Russell-Smith et al. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF WILDLAND FIRE
- Can Australian fire regimes be managed for carbon benefits?
- (2009) Ross A. Bradstock et al. NEW PHYTOLOGIST
- What Limits Trees in C4 Grasslands and Savannas?
- (2008) William J. Bond Annual Review of Ecology Evolution and Systematics
- TURNER REVIEW No. 18. Greenhouse gas fluxes from natural ecosystems
- (2008) Ram C. Dalal et al. AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY
- Postfire root distribution of Scots pine in relation to fire behaviour
- (2008) Evgeniya Smirnova et al. CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FOREST RESEARCH
- Global characterization of fire activity: toward defining fire regimes from Earth observation data
- (2008) EMILIO CHUVIECO et al. GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
- Impacts of climate change on the vegetation of Africa: an adaptive dynamic vegetation modelling approach
- (2008) SIMON SCHEITER et al. GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
- Big fires and their ecological impacts in Australian savannas: size and frequency matters
- (2008) Cameron P. Yates et al. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF WILDLAND FIRE
- Spatio-temporal trends in tree cover of a tropical mesic savanna are driven by landscape disturbance
- (2008) Caroline E. R. Lehmann et al. JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY
- Nitrogen availability is not affected by frequent fire in a South African savanna
- (2008) Corli Coetsee et al. JOURNAL OF TROPICAL ECOLOGY
- Old-growth forests as global carbon sinks
- (2008) Sebastiaan Luyssaert et al. NATURE
- Effects of fire frequency on oak litter decomposition and nitrogen dynamics
- (2008) Daniel L. Hernández et al. OECOLOGIA
- Soil–vegetation relationships in cerrados under different fire frequencies
- (2008) Danilo Muniz da Silva et al. PLANT AND SOIL
- Economy and ecology of emerging markets and credits for bio-sequestered carbon on private land in tropical Australia
- (2007) Colin Hunt ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS
- Charcoal and carbon storage in forest soils of the Rocky Mountain West
- (2007) Thomas H DeLuca et al. FRONTIERS IN ECOLOGY AND THE ENVIRONMENT
Discover Peeref hubs
Discuss science. Find collaborators. Network.
Join a conversationPublish scientific posters with Peeref
Peeref publishes scientific posters from all research disciplines. Our Diamond Open Access policy means free access to content and no publication fees for authors.
Learn More