Author:
Bowman D. M. J. S.,Price Owen,Whitehead P. J.,Walsh Angie
Abstract
An aerial survey along a transect from eastern side of the Arnhem Land Plateau
where Aboriginal people still lead a semi-traditional lifestyle, to the
unoccupied western side of the Plateau, revealed systematic differences in the
proportion of living and dead Callitris intratropica
trees. Multiple regression analysis showed that the highest proportion of dead
C. intratropica stems occurred on unoccupied, level
terrain dominated by open Eucalyptus forests, with a
minor or complete absence of Allosyncarpia ternata
closed-canopy forests. A detailed study of one population of
C. intratropica in western Arnhem Land adjacent to a
small patch of A. ternata forest, known as Round Jungle,
showed that the population had a unimodal size-class distribution, reflecting
a low density of stems less than 10 cm in diameter at breast height (dbh). A
computer simulation model was developed on the basis of estimates of annual
fecundity, mortality and growth rates derived from observations of the stand.
Sensitivity analyses suggested that a well-stocked stand could be transformed
to one similar to that observed at Round Jungle after 50 years, if annual
mortality rate of the immature stems (i.e. <12 cm dbh) was greater than
85%. Under these conditions, the stand would become extinct after 325
years. Variation in estimates of mature-stem (>12 cm dbh) mortality and
fecundity had much less effect on the predictions of the model than the rate
of mortality of the smallest size class. The model suggests that
C. intratropica populations can rapidly fluctuate in
response to changes in fire regime, while extinction is a gradual process and
is consequently unlikely if some seedlings can escape burning, for instance by
establishing in fire-protected microsites. This conclusion is consistent with
the observed greater mortality of C. intratropica on
sand sheets that have little topographic variability at the micro- or
mesoscale, compared with other habitat types in areas that are currently
unoccupied by Aboriginal people. Our study shows that predicting the fate of
individual populations will require careful consideration of local factors
such as the presence of micro-topographically safe sites for seedling
establishment, as well as the surrounding pattern of vegetation and landforms
that mediate the impact of fire on C. intratropica.
However, we suggest that rather than refining details of the adjustment of
C. intratropica in response to changed fire regimes
associated with European colonisation, subsequent research should focus on the
effect and significance of these changes for other organisms.
Subject
Plant Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics