Citation

BibTex format

@article{Spessa:2005:10.1111/j.1466-822x.2005.00174.x,
author = {Spessa, A and McBeth, B and Prentice, C},
doi = {10.1111/j.1466-822x.2005.00174.x},
journal = {Global Ecology and Biogeography},
pages = {439--454},
title = {Relationships among fire frequency, rainfall and vegetation patterns in the wet-dry tropics of northern Australia: An analysis based on NOAA-AVHRR data},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1466-822x.2005.00174.x},
volume = {14},
year = {2005}
}

RIS format (EndNote, RefMan)

TY  - JOUR
AB - Aim To quantify the regional-scale spatio-temporal relationships among rainfall, vegetation and fire frequency in the Australian wet-dry tropics (AWDT). Location Northern Australia: Cape York Peninsula, central Arnhem, central Kimberly, Einasleigh Uplands, Gulf Fall Uplands and northern Kimberley. Methods Monthly 'fraction of photosynthetic active radiation absorbed by green vegetation' (fAPAR) was decomposed into monthly evergreen (EG) and monthly raingreen (RG) components using time-series techniques applied to monthly normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) data from Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR) imagery. Fire affected areas were independently mapped at the same spatio-temporal resolution from AVHRR imagery. Weather station records were spatially interpolated to create monthly rainfall surfaces. Vegetation structural classes were derived from a digitized map of northern Australian vegetation communities (1:1,000,000). Generalized linear models were used to quantify relationships among the fAPAR, EG and RG signals, vegetation structure, rainfall and fire frequency, for the period November 1996-December 2001. Results The fAPAR and EG signals are positively correlated with annual rainfall and canopy cover, notably: EG<inf>closed forest</inf> > EG <inf>open heathland</inf> > EG<inf>open forest</inf> > EG <inf>woodland</inf> > EG<inf>open woodland</inf> > EG <inf>low woodland</inf> > EG<inf>low open woodland</inf> > EG <inf>open grassland</inf>· Vegetation height and fAPAR are positively correlated, excluding the special case of open heathland. The RG signal is highest where intermediate annual rainfall and strong seasonality in rainfall coincide, and is associated with vegetation structure as follows: RG <inf>open grassland</inf> > RG<inf>woodland</inf> > RG <inf>open forest</inf>
AU - Spessa,A
AU - McBeth,B
AU - Prentice,C
DO - 10.1111/j.1466-822x.2005.00174.x
EP - 454
PY - 2005///
SN - 1466-822X
SP - 439
TI - Relationships among fire frequency, rainfall and vegetation patterns in the wet-dry tropics of northern Australia: An analysis based on NOAA-AVHRR data
T2 - Global Ecology and Biogeography
UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1466-822x.2005.00174.x
VL - 14
ER -

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