Relationships between soil temperatures and properties of fire in feathertop spinifex (Triodia schinzii (Henrard) Lazarides) sandridge desert in central Australia

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dc.contributor Wright, BR
dc.contributor Clarke, PJ
dc.date.accessioned 2011-12-10T16:40:29Z
dc.date.available 2011-12-10T16:40:29Z
dc.date.issued 2008
dc.identifier.citation The Rangeland Journal (2008) 30(3): 317-325
dc.identifier.issn 1036-9872
dc.identifier.uri http://livestocklibrary.com.au/handle/1234/5252
dc.description.abstract Soil temperatures during wildfires are known to influence seed bank and plant resprouting dynamics in arid Australian grasslands. Nevertheless, relationships between soil temperatures and factors such as fuel load, fuel type, season of burn, time-of-day and soil moisture are poorly understood. This study used small-scale experimental burns to determine the effects of these five variables on soil temperature profiles (0–4cm) during fire in spinifex sandridge country in the Haasts Bluff Aboriginal Reserve, west of Alice Springs. Fuel load and type were found to strongly influence soil temperatures, with soils directly beneath Triodia hummocks experiencing more heating than hummock edges or between-hummock gaps, and soils beneath Triodia hummocks experiencing more heating than either mulga (Acacia aneura F.Muell. ex. Benth.) litter or Aristida holathera Domin. tussocks. Season and time-of-day also had strong effects on below-ground heating, with soil temperatures remaining elevated for longer periods during summer compared to winter burns, and day-time burns producing higher temperature maxima and longer durations of elevated soil temperatures than night burns. Soil moisture also had a strong impact on temperature profiles during fire, with high levels of soil moisture strongly reducing the soil heating during fire. These results indicate that the examined factors will strongly influence soil temperature regimes during spinifex wildfires. Hence, they are likely to affect the composition of plant assemblages in post-fire environments through their impacts on vegetative regeneration and on seed bank processes.
dc.publisher CSIRO Publishing
dc.source.uri http://www.publish.csiro.au/?act=view_file&file_id=RJ07049.pdf
dc.subject Aristida holathera
dc.subject fire intensity
dc.subject mulga
dc.subject seed banks
dc.subject temperature
dc.title Relationships between soil temperatures and properties of fire in feathertop spinifex (Triodia schinzii (Henrard) Lazarides) sandridge desert in central Australia
dc.type Research
dc.description.version Journal article
dc.identifier.volume 30
dc.identifier.page 317-325
dc.identifier.issue 3


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