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Seeking knowledge of traditional Indigenous burning practices to inform regional bushfire management
Authors:Douglas K Bardsley  Thomas AA Prowse  Caren Siegfriedt
Institution:1. Geography, Environment and Population, School of Social Sciences, The University of Adelaide, Adelaide, Australiadouglas.bardsley@adelaide.edu.au;3. School of Mathematical Sciences, The University of Adelaide, Adelaide, AustraliaORCID Iconhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-4093-767X;4. Geography, Environment and Population, School of Social Sciences, The University of Adelaide, Adelaide, Australia
Abstract:ABSTRACT

A transdisciplinary review of the current academic knowledge of Indigenous traditional fire management is presented for the Mt Lofty Ranges in South Australia. For a long time, the roles of Indigenous management of the landscape have either been overlooked or discounted within environmental studies. That situation is beginning to change in many parts of Australia. However, this review of knowledge of traditional Indigenous burning practices specifically for the Mt Lofty Ranges suggests that there is very little formalised, academic knowledge available that could be utilised to inform prescribed burning practices in the region. Perhaps Indigenous peoples’ use of fire was strongly governed by individual choices, or perhaps established regimes demarcated roles across groups; perhaps some areas were burnt regularly and others were left unaltered – there is still no clear evidence from the academic literature to provide even limited understandings of such elements of pre-colonial fire regimes. That gap in knowledge will become increasingly problematic as the need for appropriate, sophisticated burning practices to respond to risk in peri-urban Adelaide increases with a changing climate. To learn from traditional Indigenous land management: (a) formal knowledge needs to be generated on past regional burning practices; and (b) understanding needs to be developed as to whether past burning practices could lead to effective hazard management and biodiversity outcomes within contemporary landscapes. Such an integration of Indigenous knowledge for effective environmental management will only be possible if the injustices of past exclusions of the importance of Indigenous biocultural practices are recognised.
Keywords:Indigenous  fire  biocultural landscapes  traditional ecological knowledge  South Australia
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