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. 2008 Sep 30;105(39):14796-801.
doi: 10.1073/pnas.0804757105. Epub 2008 Sep 22.

The "fire stick farming" hypothesis: Australian Aboriginal foraging strategies, biodiversity, and anthropogenic fire mosaics

Affiliations

The "fire stick farming" hypothesis: Australian Aboriginal foraging strategies, biodiversity, and anthropogenic fire mosaics

R Bliege Bird et al. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. .

Abstract

Aboriginal burning in Australia has long been assumed to be a "resource management" strategy, but no quantitative tests of this hypothesis have ever been conducted. We combine ethnographic observations of contemporary Aboriginal hunting and burning with satellite image analysis of anthropogenic and natural landscape structure to demonstrate the processes through which Aboriginal burning shapes arid-zone vegetational diversity. Anthropogenic landscapes contain a greater diversity of successional stages than landscapes under a lightning fire regime, and differences are of scale, not of kind. Landscape scale is directly linked to foraging for small, burrowed prey (monitor lizards), which is a specialty of Aboriginal women. The maintenance of small-scale habitat mosaics increases small-animal hunting productivity. These results have implications for understanding the unique biodiversity of the Australian continent, through time and space. In particular, anthropogenic influences on the habitat structure of paleolandscapes are likely to be spatially localized and linked to less mobile, "broad-spectrum" foraging economies.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Figures

Fig. 1.
Fig. 1.
Satellite images of habitat heterogeneity in the Martu homelands. (A) Landsat 7 ETM+ image mosaic (bands 7, 4, 2) of the study region surrounding Parnngurr Community taken November and December 2002. Recent fires are shaded red to orange, regrowing habitat appears yellow to green, and mature growth as dark green to blue. (B and C) Images are enlarged to show detail in the habitat mosaic of two 28-km2 landscapes: a landscape under a primarily anthropogenic regime 19 km from community (center 122.437E, 22.910 S) (B); a landscape under a primarily lightning ignition regime 91 km from community (center 123.505 E, 22.915 S) (C).
Fig. 2.
Fig. 2.
Relative distribution plot comparing reflectance values for an anthropogenic landscape with a control one. The anthropogenic landscape shows a more uniform distribution of reflectance values.

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