41 results on '"BOWMAN, DAVID M. J. S."'
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2. Turnover of southern cypresses in the post-Gondwanan world : extinction, transoceanic dispersal, adaptation and rediversification
3. Can trophic rewilding reduce the impact of fire in a more flammable world?
4. Differential demographic filtering by surface fires: How fuel type and fuel load affect sapling mortality of an obligate seeder savanna tree
5. Soil or fire: what causes treeless sedgelands in Tasmanian wet forests?
6. Fire is a major driver of patterns of genetic diversity in two co-occurring Tasmanian palaeoendemic conifers
7. Does inherent flammability of grass and litter fuels contribute to continental patterns of landscape fire activity?
8. The relative importance of intrinsic and extrinsic factors in the decline of obligate seeder forests
9. Human-Imposed, Fine-Grained Patch Burning Explains the Population Stability of a Fire-Sensitive Conifer in a Frequently Burnt Northern Australia Savanna
10. Global combustion: the connection between fossil fuel and biomass burning emissions (1997–2010)
11. The pyrohealth transition: how combustion emissions have shaped health through human history
12. Pyrodiversity is the coupling of biodiversity and fire regimes in food webs
13. Post-fire resprouting strategies of rainforest and savanna saplings along the rainforest–savanna boundary in the Australian monsoon tropics
14. Transient hybridization, not homoploid hybrid speciation, between ancient and deeply divergent conifers
15. Using a rainforest-flame forest mosaic to test the hypothesis that leaf and litter fuel flammability is under natural selection
16. Aborigine-managed forest, savanna and grassland: biome switching in montane eastern Australia
17. Pyrogeographic models, feedbacks and the future of global fire regimes
18. A warmer world will reduce tree growth in evergreen broadleaf forests: evidence from Australian temperate and subtropical eucalypt forests
19. Letting giants be – rethinking active fire management of old-growth eucalypt forest in the Australian tropics
20. Pyrogeography, historical ecology, and the human dimensions of fire regimes
21. The legacy of mid-Holocene fire on a Tasmanian montane landscape
22. Savanna Vegetation-Fire-Climate Relationships Differ Among Continents
23. Climate, not Aboriginal landscape burning, controlled the historical demography and distribution of fire-sensitive conifer populations across Australia
24. Fire regimes of Australia: a pyrogeographic model system
25. Not an ancient relic: the endemic Livistona palms of arid central Australia could have been introduced by humans
26. Tree cover—fire interactions promote the persistence of a fire-sensitive conifer in a highly flammable savanna
27. Did central Australian megafaunal extinction coincide with abrupt ecosystem collapse or gradual climate change?
28. The human dimension of fire regimes on Earth
29. Fire regimes: moving from a fuzzy concept to geographic entity
30. Firescape ecology: how topography determines the contrasting distribution of fire and rain forest in the south-west of the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area
31. Paradise burnt: How colonizing humans transform landscapes with fire
32. Experimental evidence that fire causes a tree recruitment bottleneck in an Australian tropical savanna
33. Using generalized autoregressive error models to understand fire-vegetation-soil feedbacks in a mulga-spinifex landscape mosaic
34. Using carbon isotope analysis of the diet of two introduced Australian megaherbivores to understand Pleistocene megafaunal extinctions
35. The Roles of Statistical Inference and Historical Sources in Understanding Landscape Change: The Case of Feral Buffalo in the Freshwater Floodplains of Kakadu National Park
36. The Carbon and Nitrogen Isotope Composition of Australian Grasses in Relation to Climate
37. Fire Controls Population Structure in Four Dominant Tree Species in a Tropical Savanna
38. Fire in the Earth System
39. Spatio-Temporal Trends in Tree Cover of a Tropical Mesic Savanna Are Driven by Landscape Disturbance
40. Temporal and Spatial Variation of Fine Roots in a Northern Australian Eucalyptus tetrodonta Savanna
41. Global Change and the Terrestrial Biosphere: Achievements and Challenges . By H. H. Shugart and F. I. Woodward . Hoboken (New Jersey): Wiley-Blackwell. $134.95 (hardcover); $69.95 (paper). x + 242 p.; ill.; index. ISBN: 978-1-4443-3721-1 (hc); 978-1-4051-8561-5 (pb). 2011.
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