695 results on '"BOWMAN, DAVID M. J. S."'
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2. Long-term stability of temperate Australian wet forest-moorland mosaics despite recurrent fires associated with late Holocene climate change
3. Pyric Herbivory and the Nexus Between Forage, Fire and Native and Introduced Large Grazing Herbivores in Australian Tropical Savannas
4. Forest-sedgeland boundaries are historically stable and resilient to wildfire at Blakes Opening in the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area, Australia
5. When soil becomes fuel: identifying a safe window for prescribed burning of Tasmanian vegetation growing on organic soils
6. Smoke pollution must be part of the savanna fire management equation: A case study from Darwin, Australia
7. Promoting Optimal Habitat Availability by Maintaining Fine-Grained Burn Mosaics: A Modelling Study in an Australian Semi-Arid Temperate Woodland
8. Global variation in ecoregion flammability thresholds
9. Carbon dioxide and particulate emissions from the 2013 Tasmanian firestorm: implications for Australian carbon accounting
10. Population collapse of a Gondwanan conifer follows the loss of Indigenous fire regimes in a northern Australian savanna
11. Reply to: Logging elevated the probability of high-severity fire in the 2019–20 Australian forest fires
12. Dynamics and predicted distribution of an irrupting ‘sleeper’ population: fallow deer in Tasmania
13. Ecosystem transformation following the mid-nineteenth century cessation of Aboriginal fire management in Cape Pillar, Tasmania
14. The 2016 Tasmanian Wilderness Fires: Fire Regime Shifts and Climate Change in a Gondwanan Biogeographic Refugium
15. Climate, fire, and anthropogenic disturbance determine the current global distribution of tropical forest and savanna
16. Pyrogeography in flux: Reorganization of Australian fire regimes in a hotter world
17. Climate change must be factored into savanna carbon- management projects to avoid maladaptation: the case of worsening air pollution in western Top End of the Northern Territory, Australia
18. Smoke health costs and the calculus for wildfires fuel management: a modelling study
19. Climate Change, Wildfires, Heatwaves and Health Impacts in Australia
20. The severity and extent of the Australia 2019–20 Eucalyptus forest fires are not the legacy of forest management
21. Reassessing the alternative ecosystem states proposition in the African savanna‐forest domain.
22. Unprecedented health costs of smoke-related PM2.5 from the 2019–20 Australian megafires
23. Restoring landscape burning is compatible with conservation and livestock production in a southeast Australian grassland fragment.
24. Manage fire regimes, not fires
25. AusTraits, a curated plant trait database for the Australian flora
26. Save the world’s forest giants from infernos
27. Vegetation fires in the Anthropocene
28. Human–environmental drivers and impacts of the globally extreme 2017 Chilean fires
29. Turnover of southern cypresses in the post-Gondwanan world : extinction, transoceanic dispersal, adaptation and rediversification
30. Can trophic rewilding reduce the impact of fire in a more flammable world?
31. The 2016 Tasmanian Wilderness Fires: Fire Regime Shifts and Climate Change in a Gondwanan Biogeographic Refugium
32. Understanding the perspectives and needs of multiple stakeholders: Identifying key elements of a digital health intervention to protect against environmental hazards.
33. Taming the flame, from local to global extreme wildfires
34. Arrested Policy Development of Private Fire Shelters (Fire Bunkers) Is a Barrier to Adaptation to the Australian Bushfire Crisis
35. Differential demographic filtering by surface fires: How fuel type and fuel load affect sapling mortality of an obligate seeder savanna tree
36. Soil or fire: what causes treeless sedgelands in Tasmanian wet forests?
37. Climate Change, Wildfires, Heatwaves and Health Impacts in Australia
38. Fire is a major driver of patterns of genetic diversity in two co-occurring Tasmanian palaeoendemic conifers
39. Does inherent flammability of grass and litter fuels contribute to continental patterns of landscape fire activity?
40. Fire intensity impacts on physiological performance and mortality in Pinus monticola and Pseudotsuga menziesii saplings: a dose–response analysis
41. Detecting, Monitoring and Foreseeing Wildland Fire Requires Similar Multiscale Viewpoints as Meteorology and Climatology
42. The relative importance of intrinsic and extrinsic factors in the decline of obligate seeder forests
43. Biomimicry can help humans to coexist sustainably with fire
44. Evaluating User Preferences, Comprehension, and Trust in Apps for Environmental Health Hazards: Qualitative Case Study
45. Human-Imposed, Fine-Grained Patch Burning Explains the Population Stability of a Fire-Sensitive Conifer in a Frequently Burnt Northern Australia Savanna
46. Global combustion: the connection between fossil fuel and biomass burning emissions (1997–2010)
47. The pyrohealth transition: how combustion emissions have shaped health through human history
48. Pyrodiversity is the coupling of biodiversity and fire regimes in food webs
49. Post-fire resprouting strategies of rainforest and savanna saplings along the rainforest–savanna boundary in the Australian monsoon tropics
50. Transient hybridization, not homoploid hybrid speciation, between ancient and deeply divergent conifers
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