Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area Climate Change and Bushfire Research Initiative
Fire managers in the Parks and Wildlife Service Tasmania (PWS) have been provided with new and updated decision making tools to aid in the development of the planned burning strategy for the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area (TWWHA).
The landscape scale fire regime model FIRESCAPE-SWTAS has been updated to provide an enhanced capability to assess PWS planned burning strategies for the TWWHA. This has been achieved through:
- updates to vegetation data and other spatial input data
- expansion of the model domain to encompass the entire TWWHA and influential adjacent reserves and vegetation westward of the TWWHA
- implementation of a new facility to ingest gridded weather data, such as the new high resolution BARRA products
- implementation of a planned burning strategy currently under development by PWS, as part of the TWWHA Fire Management Plan.
The updates to FIRESCAPE-SWTAS also provide an enhanced capability to assess impacts of climate change on fire regime in TWWHA through the application of Climate Futures for South-East Australia high-resolution regional climate projections.
An assessment of an interim Planned Burning Strategy indicates a significant decrease in the number of unplanned fires in the regions adjacent to planned burn areas. The updated model allows the rapid testing of Planned Burning Scenarios, allowing the optimisation of resource allocation.
This project has produced a tool to calculate climate suitability of a target region. It uses the region defined by an input polygon (such as a shapefile) to subset gridded weather data to define the ‘climate’ of this target region. This can then be compared to the ‘climate’ of every other region (in both space and time) to find regions that are similar. The software developed for this analysis will been made public through The Comprehensive R Archive Network as an open source package for ongoing use and development.
Climate suitability for the historical, mid-century and end-of-century time periods have been provided for 8 broad vegetation types. These indicate a dramatic decrease in the extent of all analogous climates into the future driven by compounding drying and warming trends. Drying trends dominate the mid-century, while warming trends become more important by the end-of-century.
Funding
Department of Premier and Cabinet
History
Commissioning body
Antarctic Climate and Ecosystems Cooperative Research CentrePagination
67Department/School
Institute for Marine and Antarctic StudiesPublisher
Antarctic Climate and Ecosystems Cooperative Research CentrePlace of publication
Hobart, TasmaniaRights statement
Copyright © 2019 The Antarctic Climate & Ecosystems Cooperative Research Centre. This work is copyright. It may be reproduced in whole or in part for study or training purposes subject to the inclusion of an acknowledgement of the source, but not for commercial sale or use. Reproduction for purposes other than those listed above requires the written permission of the Antarctic Climate & Ecosystems Cooperative Research Centre.Repository Status
- Open