Document


Title

A framework for testing the influence of Aboriginal burning on grassy ecosystems in lowland, mesic south-eastern Australia
Document Type: Journal Article
Author(s): P. W. Foreman
Publication Year: 2016

Cataloging Information

Keyword(s):
  • aborigines
  • African savannas
  • Australia
  • Ethno-Historical Record
  • eucalypt forest
  • European settlement
  • fire management
  • fire management
  • Grassland-Woodland Boundaries
  • herbaceous vegetation
  • historical ecology
  • land use
  • temperate Australia
  • vegetation change
  • Woodland Boundary
Region(s):
  • International
Record Maintained By:
Record Last Modified: June 24, 2018
FRAMES Record Number: 55441
Tall Timbers Record Number: 33469
TTRS Location Status: Not in file
TTRS Call Number: Available
TTRS Abstract Status: Fair use, Okay

This bibliographic record was either created or modified by the Tall Timbers Research Station and Land Conservancy and is provided without charge to promote research and education in Fire Ecology. The E.V. Komarek Fire Ecology Database is the intellectual property of the Tall Timbers Research Station and Land Conservancy.

Description

The complex interactions among climate, soils, fire and humans in the biogeography of natural grasslands has long been debated in Australia. On the one hand, ecological models assume the primacy of climate and soils. On the other, Aboriginal burning is hypothesised to have altered the entire continent since before the last glacial maximum. The present paper develops a framework to test for the 'fingerprint' of Aboriginal burning in lowland, mesic grassy ecosystems of south-eastern Australia, using ecological theory, and the ethno-historical record. It is clear that fire-stick farming was used to promote staple roots in south-eastern Australia and, in some instances, it has been shown to influence grassland-woodland boundaries. The framework comprises the following three evidence lines: (1) archival benchmarking and palaeoecology; (2) phytoecology; and (3) ethnology and archaeology. That fire-stick farming was likely instrumental in grassland formation and maintenance must be supported by evidence that shows that 'natural' grasslands exist in climatically-edaphically unexpected places, that fine-scale patterns and dynamics are at least partly due to fire and that the fire regime has been influenced by Aboriginal burning. Application of the framework indicated that widespread Aboriginal burning for staple foods likely extended the area of temperate grasslands and influenced their structure and function. Journal compilation © CSIRO 2016

Citation:
Foreman, P. W. 2016. A framework for testing the influence of Aboriginal burning on grassy ecosystems in lowland, mesic south-eastern Australia. Australian Journal of Botany, v. 64, no. 7-8, p. 626-642. 10.1071/BT16081.