Abstract

Rehabilitated lands created by open-cut coal mines are generally protected by land managers from fire and grazing disturbances. This practice is employed to reduce negative impacts, such as erosion, on the developing ecosystems. However, fire exclusion over long periods inadvertently contributes to increased fire risk on rehabilitated landforms, particularly when high biomass, mono-dominant grasses form a major component of these new ecosystems. In May 2015, an experimental fire burnt 117ha of rehabilitation at a coal mine site in the Bowen Basin, Australia. Standing grass fuel loads, dominated by buffel grass (Cenchrus ciliaris L.), were up to 9.3t/ha in grassland areas and 5.3t/ha in areas of open woodland. Average litter fuel loads were 2.4 and 3.6t/ha for grassland and open woodland, respectively. Calculated fire intensity was higher in grassland (4612±502kWm−1) than open woodland areas (1977±804kWm−1) indicating that rehabilitated landforms dominated by buffel grass may represent a higher fire risk to mine sites and regional areas in the Bowen Basin when compared to the original vegetation. Fire behaviour reflected the varying underlying terrain, fuel loads and surface soil or overburden conditions. Further research is recommended to investigate fire behaviour in buffel grasslands across a range of fuel load and curing conditions, with the aim to develop an invasive grass fire spread model that can be used inform both landscape reconstruction prescriptions for ecological engineers and more broadly in managing the fire risk across landscapes dominated by these vegetation types.

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