Fire in the Tasmanian landscape
Fire in the Tasmanian landscape is unique, we're blessed with such a diverse range of habitats; from wet rain-forest to dry sclerophyll forest, plains of button grass and a bounty of everything in between. Each ecosystem has it's own needs, some needing fire to regenerate and others like the pencil pine stands avoiding fire for thousands of years.
Over the years Landcarers have drawn on a wide range of information, best practice and first nations fire management practices to help manage our unique landscapes for the betterment of everything that lives within them.

Photo: Friends of Bass Strait Island (FOBSI)
Tassie Resources
Here we have an incomplete list of resources shining a light into different fire management practices in Tasmania.
Cultural Burning

Ngune Nire (Fire Good) Cultural Burning Handbook (SETAC) - This handbook outlines the Aboriginal meaning of fire in Lutruwita/Trouwerner, Tasmania, how to manage a burn and the ecological benefits of a cool fire. "Aboriginal people read the systems of fire – the grass, soil type, what animals live there and how they benefit from it. Burning styles differ depending on how “sick” the land is." "Aboriginal fire management techniques cannot be applied universally or done at scale as they are linked intimately to the landscape. What works in Arthur River will not work in the rainforests in Southwest Lutruwita or the dry Eucalyptus and Peppermint forests on the East coast."
If you are interested in cultural burning on your property, please reach out to us for the most up-to-date contact information. Cultural burning practitioners charge a fee for service. Watch this video of the South East Tasmanian Aboriginal Corporation's Land management crew giving us a little insight on cultural burning and its benefits in Tasmania.
Other Handy Resources
Some reports from the Victorian Natural Values 2009 Fire Recovery Program
Other Web Links
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The Conversation - some interesting reading and a huge selection of bushfire-related articles

Photo: Cultural burning workshop with SETAC (Credit Anna Cadden 2022)
If you find other interesting articles or fire management resources please share them with us to add to this page.