Travis22 wrote:Interesting website Icefest. Thanks for the link however i didnt find that article interesting or informative at all on the matter.
I did like some of the other articles there tho.
I guess re: the fuel reduction burns article i think its pretty vague, too vague. Im more interested then ever these days and constantly find myself in the middle between all bush user groups. Its very frustrating.
All that article needed was some bs comment about alpine grazing to top it off. (For the record im 110% against alpine grazing).
Travis.
I agree Travis
I think there are a lot of issues missed in the current Conversation articles.
I keep meaning to add my piece but the discussions at TC generally have been getting pretty vitriolic of late and there's only so much I can deal with before I bite.
But I'll add my 2c here...
I was out looking at a reduction burn near Townsville the other day and the burned area (Townsville Common swamplands) had about 80% canopy scorch (% of canopy burned above burned ground - my own metric), which to my mind indicates a fire lit too late and burned too hot. A fuel reduction burn has no
need to burn the canopy and the loss of over-story or high-level understory only contributes to loss of habitat, canopy herbivory and aerial predation protection as well as micro-climate drying and further dry fuel accumulation.
From a bureaucratic POV it was probably a 'success': a quota was fulfilled, a milestone accomplished, a management target met. But ecologically this was less a 'prevention burn' than just a
burn. Little damage was prevented and no habitat or vegetative function preserved.
In thinking of this discrepancy my gut feeling is that the issue is less about our understanding of the landscape than about bureaucratic regulation which forces managers to burn later in drier conditions than is most conducive to the landscape.
When planning a burn (I'm guessing) you have to; consult with advisors, have the necessary qualifications, have approval from managers, fill out the required paperwork, make sure all insurance, OHS, WHS protocols and departmental guidelines are followed, conform with council and government or ministerial directives, give reasonable notice to the CFA, neighbors, council and community and close the area (after issuing closure notices ahead of time).
To then go and drop a match in the grass, only for it to fizzle after a few square metres would be deemed a 'failure of planning' at a huge perceived cost rather than the successful replication of true mosaic burning that it is.
Real mosaic burning then, could only be replicated by people living full-time in the landscape who are able to daily 'nibble away' at fuel accumulation without greater impact; unrestrained from the overarching hierarchies that force an over-blown 'successful' outcome.
Maybe we need to define the measure of success as small, local and having little or no impact on canopy or ground habitat.
The other issue missed in The Conversation's discussion on fire and climate change (and on climate change in general) is that many of the
effects of climate change on the landscape will be almost entirely masked by contemporary landscape modification.
The effect of climate change (while undoubtedly real) will be negligible in a landscape compared to the problem of forest cutting and clearing for roads, settlement and infrastructure. Landscape clearing exposes forested areas to micro-climate change through exposure to drying wind in forest breaks and edges. The fragmentation of continuous vegetation cover may increase its flammability dramatically.
http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2011/08/24/1110245108.shortInterested in what you think
may bite the bullet and copy this into The Conversation
cheers
Steve