Recent Australian wildfires made worse by logging and associated forest management

The recent fires in southern Australia were unprecedented in scale and severity. Much commentary has rightly focused on the role of climate change in exacerbating the risk of fire. Here, we contend that policy makers must recognize that historical and contemporary logging of forests has had profound...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature ecology & evolution 2020-07, Vol.4 (7), p.898-900
Hauptverfasser: Lindenmayer, David B., Kooyman, Robert M., Taylor, Chris, Ward, Michelle, Watson, James E. M.
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container_title Nature ecology & evolution
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creator Lindenmayer, David B.
Kooyman, Robert M.
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description The recent fires in southern Australia were unprecedented in scale and severity. Much commentary has rightly focused on the role of climate change in exacerbating the risk of fire. Here, we contend that policy makers must recognize that historical and contemporary logging of forests has had profound effects on these fires’ severity and frequency.
doi_str_mv 10.1038/s41559-020-1195-5
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subjects 631/158/672
704/158/2465
706/1145
Australia
Biological and Physical Anthropology
Biomedical and Life Sciences
Climate change
Comment
Ecology
Evolutionary Biology
Forest management
Forests
Life Sciences
Logging
Paleontology
Wildfires
Zoology
title Recent Australian wildfires made worse by logging and associated forest management
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