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Fire-climate interactions and their biodiversity implications for SW Australian shrublands
Conference presentation   Open access

Fire-climate interactions and their biodiversity implications for SW Australian shrublands

N.J. Enright
Kwongan Foundation, Perth, Australia
Mucina, L.,Price, J.N. & Kalwij, J.M. (eds.), Biodiversity and vegetation: patterns, processes, conservation. 57th Annual Symposium of the International Association for Vegetation Science (Perth, Western Australia, 01/09/2014–05/09/2014)
2014
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Abstract

Global importance of fire: Disturbance regime is a fundamental driver of plant community composition and structure, and of species coexistence. Fire is one of the most common causes of recurrent landscape scale disturbance, and has shaped evolution and adaptation in many taxa globally (Bond & Keeley 2005). Altered fire regimes are a significant component of global environmental change and have been implicated in species losses and invasions. Climate change is predicted to result in decreased precipitation and increased temperature across many fire-prone regions, resulting in longer fire seasons and increased fire likelihood, while reduced productivity may lead to increased fuel limitation and less fire in other situations (Moritz et al. 2012).

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