Search Results - "Lane, Patrick"
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Wildfire effects on water quality in forest catchments: A review with implications for water supply
Published in Journal of hydrology (Amsterdam) (05-01-2011)“…► Wildfire effects on water quality vary substantially. ► Large post-fire increases to sediment, nutrient and trace element fluxes reported. ► Wildfires may…”
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Ground and satellite-based assessments of wet eucalypt forest survival and regeneration for predicting long-term hydrological responses to a large wildfire
Published in Forest ecology and management (15-04-2013)“…► Forest ecological response to fire mapped using the normalised burn ratio. ► Eucalyptus regnans and Eucalyptus delegatensis more fire sensitive than…”
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Journal Article Conference Proceeding -
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The Influence of Atmosphere‐Ocean Phenomenon on Water Availability Across Temperate Australia
Published in Water resources research (01-01-2022)“…Links between climate variability modes, rainfall, and streamflow are important for understanding the trajectories of change and dynamics in water…”
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Modeling the effects of surface storage, macropore flow and water repellency on infiltration after wildfire
Published in Journal of hydrology (Amsterdam) (26-05-2014)“…•Infiltration after wildfire is initially controlled by storage in wettable surface material.•Steady state infiltration is controlled by the hydraulic…”
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5
Evidence of debris flow occurrence after wildfire in upland catchments of south-east Australia
Published in Geomorphology (Amsterdam, Netherlands) (01-02-2011)“…Numerous reports of “flash floods”, “mud torrents” and “landslides” in burnt landscapes of south-east Australia were only recently linked to debris flows and…”
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Synergistic effects of water repellency and macropore flow on the hydraulic conductivity of a burned forest soil, south-east Australia
Published in Hydrological processes (30-09-2010)“…Research shows that water repellency is a key hydraulic property that results in reduced infiltration rates in burned soils. However, more work is required in…”
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7
Extracting LiDAR indices to characterise multilayered forest structure using mixture distribution functions
Published in Remote sensing of environment (15-02-2011)“…Discrete Light Detection and Ranging (LiDAR) data is used to stratify a multilayered eucalyptus forest and characterise the structure of the vertical profile…”
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Journal Article -
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Increasing fire frequency may trigger eco‐hydrologic divergence
Published in Hydrological processes (01-03-2023)“…Climate‐induced fire regimes may change species abundance and species composition in affected forest types, potentially altering pyro‐eco‐hydrologic feedbacks…”
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Effects of aridity in controlling the magnitude of runoff and erosion after wildfire
Published in Water resources research (01-06-2016)“…This study represents a uniquely high‐resolution observation of postwildfire runoff and erosion from dry forested uplands of SE Australia. We monitored runoff…”
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10
Wildfire contribution to streamflow variability across Australian temperate zone
Published in Journal of hydrology (Amsterdam) (01-06-2022)“…[Display omitted] •Wildfires are becoming more severe and frequent and their effects increasingly expose water resources to stress.•Climate, wildfire,…”
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Journal Article -
11
Critical climate thresholds for fire in wet, temperate forests
Published in Forest ecology and management (01-06-2023)“…•We examined climate-drivers of stand replacing fire in wet Eucalyptus forest.•The two worst fires in 120 years were on 2 days with the most extreme fire…”
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12
Forest reorganisation effects on fuel moisture content can exceed changes due to climate warming in wet temperate forests
Published in Global change biology (01-01-2024)“…The distributions of vegetation and fire activity are changing rapidly in response to climate warming. In many regions, climate effects on dead fuel moisture…”
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13
Long-term hydrological response emerges from forest self-thinning behaviour and tree sapwood allometry
Published in The Science of the total environment (15-12-2022)“…Fires in forested catchments are of great concern to catchment managers due to their potential effect on water yield. Among other factors such as…”
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Journal Article -
14
Changes in soil erosion caused by wildfire: A conceptual biogeographic model
Published in Geomorphology (Amsterdam, Netherlands) (15-08-2024)“…Soil erosion rates after wildfire are strongly controlled by intrinsic properties such as topography, weather, climate, soil, and vegetation. These landscape…”
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Performance of GEDI Space-Borne LiDAR for Quantifying Structural Variation in the Temperate Forests of South-Eastern Australia
Published in Remote sensing (Basel, Switzerland) (01-08-2022)“…Monitoring forest structural properties is critical for a range of applications because structure is key to understanding and quantifying forest biophysical…”
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16
Seasonal forecast of soil moisture over Mediterranean-climate forest catchments using a machine learning approach
Published in Journal of hydrology (Amsterdam) (01-04-2023)“…•A Machine Learning method is developed by integrating remotely sensed feedback of vegetation to antecedent rainfall to forecast seasonal soil moisture.•The…”
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Journal Article -
17
Spatio-temporal transpiration patterns reflect vegetation structure in complex upland terrain
Published in The Science of the total environment (01-12-2019)“…Topography exerts control on eco-hydrologic processes via alteration of energy inputs due to slope angle and orientation. Further, water availability varies…”
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Journal Article -
18
The Role of Fire in the Coevolution of Soils and Temperate Forests
Published in Water resources research (01-08-2020)“…Climate drives the coevolution of vegetation and the soil that supports it. Wildfire dramatically affects many key eco‐hydro‐geomorphic processes, but its…”
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Journal Article -
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Probability and Consequence of Postfire Erosion for Treatability of Water in an Unfiltered Supply System
Published in Water resources research (01-01-2021)“…Forested catchments are critical to water supply in major cities. Many of these catchments face the threat of postwildfire erosion, which can contaminate…”
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Journal Article -
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Predicting post‐wildfire overland flow using remotely sensed indicators of forest productivity
Published in Hydrological processes (01-12-2022)“…Wildfire can induce an increase in infiltration excess overland flow, which varies from barely detectible to extreme. Soil properties are an important…”
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