Tropical Fire Ecology
- 0 %
Der Artikel wird am Ende des Bestellprozesses zum Download zur Verfügung gestellt.

Tropical Fire Ecology

Climate Change, Land Use and Ecosystem Dynamics
 eBook
Sofort lieferbar | Lieferzeit: Sofort lieferbar I
ISBN-13:
9783540773818
Veröffentl:
2010
Einband:
eBook
Seiten:
682
Autor:
Mark Cochrane
Serie:
Springer Praxis Books Environmental Sciences
eBook Typ:
PDF
eBook Format:
Reflowable eBook
Kopierschutz:
Digital Watermark [Social-DRM]
Sprache:
Englisch
Beschreibung:

This book is a global synthesis of fire in tropical ecosystems. In detailing the fire situations of 17 tropical systems, it discusses all relevant subjects ranging from causes of fire to human land use and climate change to long range implications.

 

The tropics are home to most of the world’s biodiversity and are currently the frontier for human settlement. Tropical ecosystems are being converted to agricultural and other land uses at unprecedented rates. Land conversion and maintenance almost always rely on fire and, because of this, fire is now more prevalent in the tropics than anywhere else on Earth. Despite pervasive fire, human settlement and threatened biodiversity, there is little comprehensive information available on fire and its effects in tropical ecosystems.

Tropical deforestation, especially in rainforests, has been widely documented for many years. Forests are cut down and allowed to dry before being burned to remove biomass and release nutrients to grow crops. However, fires do not always stop at the borders of cleared forests. Tremendously damaging fires are increasingly spreading into forests that were never evolutionarily prepared for wild fires. The largest fires on the planet in recent decades have occurred in tropical forests and burned millions of hectares in several countries.

The numerous ecosystems of the tropics have differing levels of fire resistance, resilience or dependence. At present, there is little appreciation of the seriousness of the wild fire situation in tropical rainforests but there is even less understanding of the role that fire plays in the ecology of many fire adapted tropical ecosystems, such as savannas, grasslands and other forest types.

Fire in the tropics.- Fire in the tropics.- Fire and fire ecology: Concepts and principles.- Fire and fire ecology: Concepts and principles.- Global overview of fire in the tropics.- Overview: Global fire regime conditions, threats, and opportunities for fire management in the tropics.- Fire in the Australian tropics.- Fire-driven land cover change in Australia and W.D. Jackson’s theory of the fire ecology of southwest Tasmania.- Fires in Australia’s tropical savannas: Interactions with biodiversity, global warming, and exotic biota.- Aboriginal fire use in Australian tropical savannas: Ecological effects and management lessons.- Fire in the African tropics.- Fire ecology and fire politics in Mali and Madagascar.- Climate change and wildland fires in Mozambique.- Fire in the Asian tropics.- Tropical peatland fires in Southeast Asia.- Fire ecology and management of seasonal evergreen forests in mainland Southeast Asia.- Fire behavior and fire effects across the forest landscape of continental Southeast Asia.- Forest fire regimes and their ecological effects in seasonally dry tropical ecosystems in the Western Ghats, India.- Fire and land use effects on biodiversity in the southern Sumatran wetlands.- Fire in the South American tropics.- Fire, land use, land cover dynamics, and climate change in the Brazilian Amazon.- Fires in the cerrado, the Brazilian savanna.- The role of fire in the vegetation dynamics of upland savannas of the Venezuelan Guayana.- Pattern and process: Fire-initiated grass invasion at Amazon transitional forest edges.- Fire in the Central American tropics.- Fire in the páramo ecosystems of Central and South America.- Pan-tropical fire.- The consequences of fire for the fauna of humid tropical forests.- Fire in tropical pine ecosystems.- Changing fire regimes in tropical montane cloud forests: a global synthesis.

Fire Ecology of Tropical Ecosystems gives an extensive explanation of historic and current fire situations in the tropics, describing the fire ecology of tropical ecosystems from around the globe. Eighteen groups of leading researchers explain the many different aspects and roles of fire in tropical ecosystems. Regional chapters address a set of common subjects including the causes of fire, typical fire behavior, and elements of the fire regime. In addition, they study the impacts of human land use, landscape fragmentation and climate change on the fire environment and the challenges of fire management in these ecosystems. The common set of topics provides consistency among the chapters and facilitates comprehensive understanding of fire’s place in tropical ecology. This cohesive book covers unique aspects of fire in each ecosystem and includes a discussion of common elements to enable comparisons and syntheses of fire effects in disparate tropical ecosystems. Current scientific literature is too fragmented: it hampers the understanding of tropical fire ecology and degrades all global studies of land cover change and global carbon emissions. Fire

Ecology of Tropical Ecosystems fills a large void in our current understanding of how fire affects terrestrial biota.

The book opens with a general explanation of fire in the tropics, giving the examples of Oazaca, Mexico in 1998 and Roraima, Brazil in 1997-1998. It follows with the concepts and principles of wildland fire, including heat transfer, fire behavior, fuels, weather and climate.

Chapters 3-19 cover the implications of fire in Asia, Africa, Australia, Central and South America, Pacifica and Pantropical, addressing the causes, fire behavior, severity, fire and land use, fire and landscapes (fragmentation and connectivity), fire, climate and climate change, fire regimes (why frequency matters), issues for fire management and regional issues of specific importance or interest. An overview at the end of the book considers the global fire regime conditions, threats, and opportunities for fire management in the tropics.

Kunden Rezensionen

Zu diesem Artikel ist noch keine Rezension vorhanden.
Helfen sie anderen Besuchern und verfassen Sie selbst eine Rezension.