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Fire Ecology and Biodiversity
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Welcome to 

Fire Ecology and

Biodiversity


School of Ecosystem and Forest Sciences | Faculty of Science

University of Melbourne

About us

Congratulations to Sarah McColl-Gausden on completing an epic fieldwork campaign!

5/5/2017

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Sarah has recently finished the fieldwork component of her Masters project in the Otway Ranges.

She has been measuring the three-dimensional structure of vegetation at the long-term monitoring sites and collecting fuel hazard information. The next step is to explore how the flammability of different forest types changes over time using these data.  

Thanks to all of the amazing volunteers (around 25 of them!) who have helped out in the field over the last eight months.
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Our first (of many) western Victorian (and eastern South Australian) road trip

9/12/2016

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Our ARC Linkage project officially begins in 2017, and Holly, Julian, Matt and Alan took a road trip this week to scope out the study area.  The ultimate aim of the project is to conserve biodiversity in fire-prone fragmented landscapes by addressing two key knowledge gaps: the combined effects of fire and fragmentation on animal movement, and the implications of current and future fire regimes for animal populations.

We'll be embarking on an busy field program from mid February to May and are seeking volunteers to join week-long trips involving:
  • setting up sites
  • Elliott-trapping small mammals
  • setting up camera traps
  • funnel-trapping reptiles
  • pitfall-trapping invertebrates
  • measuring vegetation
Please contact Holly if you're interested or would like further information.
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Bushfire and Biodiversity - class of 2016

11/5/2016

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Nineteen students took our two-week intensive Masters subject "Bushfire and Biodiversity" as part of the Master of Forest Ecosystem Science and Master of Environment.  

The course covers the effects of fire on many aspects of biodiversity and ecological processes, and involves a three-day field trip to the Otway Ranges.  Students were free to design their own field exercise in groups using a pre-defined canvas - an area near Anglesea burnt by planned fire in autumn 2015.  Three groups chose to explore the effects of fire severity on plant species diversity and one group focused on birds.

Despite the intensive fieldwork, we managed to find time in the evening for table tennis and snap tournaments. 

Please contact us for more information about what the subject involves.

​Many thanks to Julio and Alan for photos. 
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The animal chase continues in 2016

6/1/2016

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Our 2016 fieldwork program has already kicked off with a team of seven visiting the Otways to help Hilman and Natasha measure vegetation structure and trap small mammals.

Hilman is nearing the end of a mammoth effort to deploy camera traps and measure vegetation at 130 long-term monitoring sites spanning foothills forest, forby forest, tall-mixed woodland and heathland.  His Masters research examines the influence of time since fire and habitat structure on the functional diversity of ground-dwelling mammals, and will reveal the attributes of prescribed burns that are likely to enhance ecosystem function.    

Natasha has recently begun fieldwork for her Masters project which seeks to test species distribution models for mammals in heathland, where several species appear to have become locally extinct or persist in very small numbers.  She is using Elliott traps to target small mammals, and plans to create new models of species' current distributions.
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Please contact us if you are interested in joining a field trip as a volunteer.  Our Otways fieldwork is finishing shortly, but several opportunities are coming up in the Central Highlands.

Many thanks to Matt and Natasha for these photos.
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Fieldwork fun and other spring pursuits

26/11/2015

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Alarmingly, it’s been two months since our last news item, so we’ve put together a collection of photos to illustrate some of our springtime activities.

Many thanks to Julio and Alan for these photos.
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Fieldwork fungi

8/9/2015

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Winter is a little slow on the news front as we wait for the animals to wake up, the roads to dry out and the fire season to begin, but at least the desk-bound months provide an opportunity to ponder the highlights and lowlights of past field seasons. 

An unexpected highlight of last autumn was the fungi.  None of us have any fungal expertise but we were dazzled by the colours and forms we found all over the Central Highlands.

We’ve put together a slide show of our favourite fungi (or more accurately, of our favourite fungal fruiting bodies). Thanks to Kate Parkins and Julio 
Nájera-Umaña for these fantastic photos.

We only know the name of one of these species – please let us know if you can help us name the rest. 


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Tracking swamp wallabies on Phillip Island

12/5/2015

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Manuela has started looking at human-wildlife interactions and movement of swamp wallabies on Phillip Island as part of her PhD research.  

So far, she’s caught 35 wallabies, 14 of which were suitable for equipping with GPS collars. She's particularly interested in how wallabies use space and move between different vegetation patches in human-modified and heterogeneous landscapes such as Phillip Island.

Please contact Manuela for more information on her PhD research.
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Fieldwork misadventures in Victoria's Central Highlands

11/4/2015

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Holly, Matt, Julian and Wibi headed out to the tall wet forest of Victoria's Central Highlands this week.  

They finished deploying remote cameras at sites established to better understand how biodiversity varies among patches of different time since fire, and where data are available, fire severity.

They avoided the heavy rain of Tuesday 7th but not the oncoming traffic.  Highlights included blue mushrooms and a 20-cm worm.  This sounds like the product of hallucinations but they've provided photographic evidence.


Please let us know if you can ID the mushrooms.
Blue mushrooms
Blue mushrooms
Meeting locals
Meeting the locals
Worm
20 cm was the distance between its eyes
Fire-side
Fire-side gatherings are perfect opportunities for checking your cameras function correctly
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    Bushfire Behaviour and Management at UniMelb
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Where to find us

University of Melbourne
4 Water Street
Creswick
Victoria 3363

Phone +61 (0)3 5321 4300 or email us

Photos contributed by Holly Sitters, Bronwyn Hradsky, students of the Fire Ecology and Biodiversity Group, and remote cameras.
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