Fire weather in the wet-dry tropics of the World Heritage Kakadu National Park, Australia

Seasonal changes of weather and fuels in the wet‐dry tropics are dramatic; fires follow suit. In this paper, we examine quantitatively rainfall, evaporation, wind, temperature and humidity information, and indices derived from them, for Kapalga Research Station and nearby Jabiru in World Heritage Ka...

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Veröffentlicht in:Australian Journal of Ecology 1996-09, Vol.21 (3), p.302-308
Hauptverfasser: Gill, A.M, Moore, P.H.R, Williams, R.J
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Williams, R.J
description Seasonal changes of weather and fuels in the wet‐dry tropics are dramatic; fires follow suit. In this paper, we examine quantitatively rainfall, evaporation, wind, temperature and humidity information, and indices derived from them, for Kapalga Research Station and nearby Jabiru in World Heritage Kakadu National Park, Northern Australia. At Kapalga, the average annual rainfall of about 1200mm mostly falls during a 6 month wet season. Grasses, green in the wet, begin to desiccate during the early dry season. Perennial grasses cure more slowly than the annuals, and grasses in drainages cure later than those on ridges. Fire weather is usually most severe in September‐October (late dry season) and least severe in January‐February (late wet season). As the dry season progresses to its peak, daily wind patterns change, daily maximum temperatures increase to an average of 36°C, dew points drop to a minimum, and soil moisture is severely depleted. In the early dry season (cf. later), fires have a greater tendency to go out at night compared with later perhaps because winds then are calmer, fuels are more discontinuous, and relights from burning logs are less likely to occur. Fire weather in the north of Australia appears less severe than that in the southeast of the continent where socially disastrous fires occur periodically.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/j.1442-9993.1996.tb00612.x
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identifier ISSN: 0307-692X
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source Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete
subjects air temperature
ambient temperature
Animal and plant ecology
Animal, plant and microbial ecology
Australia
Biological and medical sciences
broadleaved evergreen forests
dew
evaporation
fire weather
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Kakadu National Park
national parks
rain
relative humidity
savannas
Synecology
Terrestrial ecosystems
tropical grasslands
tropics
wet-dry tropics
wind
woodlands
world heritage
title Fire weather in the wet-dry tropics of the World Heritage Kakadu National Park, Australia
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