Export 42 results:
Filters: Author is Geoffrey J. Cary
Flammable Australia: Fire Regimes, Biodiversity and Ecosystems in a Changing World (CSIRO Publishing, 2012). at <http://www.publish.csiro.au/pid/6836.htm>
Flammable Australia: Fire Regimes, Biodiversity and Ecosystems in a Changing World 149-170 (CSIRO Publishing, 2012). at <http://www.publish.csiro.au/pid/6836.htm>
Implications of changing climate and atmospheric CO2 for grassland fire in south-east Australia: insights using the GRAZPLAN grassland simulation model. (2012). at <http://www.publish.csiro.au/paper/WF11103.htm>
Prescribed burning: how can it work to conserve the things we value?. International Journal of Wildland Fire 20, 721 (2011).
Relationship between leaf traits and fire-response strategies in shrub species of a mountainous region of south-eastern Australia. Annals of Botany (2011). doi:10.1093/aob/mcr263
Classifying the fire-response traits of plants: How reliable are species-level classifications?. Austral Ecology 35, 264 - 273 (2010).
The effect of fire on birds of mulga woodlandin arid central Australia. International Journal of Wildland Fire 19, 949 (2010).
Relative importance of fuel management, ignition management and weather for area burned: evidence from five landscape–fire–succession models. International Journal of Wildland Fire 18, 147 (2009).
Influence of fire severity on the regeneration, recruitment and distribution of eucalypts in the Cotter River Catchment, Australian Capital Territory. Austral Ecology 33, 55 - 67 (2008).
The relative importance of fine-scale fuel mosaics on reducing fire risk in south-west Tasmania, Australia. International Journal of Wildland Fire 17, 421 (2008).
Comparison of the Sensitivity of Landscape-fire-succession Models to Variation in Terrain, Fuel Pattern, Climate and Weather. Landscape Ecology 21, 121 - 137 (2006).
Simulation of prescribed burning strategies in south-west Tasmania, Australia: effects on unplanned fires, fire regimes, and ecological management values. International Journal of Wildland Fire 15, 527 (2006).
A classification of landscape fire succession models: spatial simulations of fire and vegetation dynamics. Ecological Modelling. 179, Mar-27 (2005).
Research priorities arising from the 2002/2003 bushfire season in south-eastern Australia. . Australian Forestry 68, 104-111 (2005).