Safety advice: Tropical Cyclone Alfred
Check park alerts for the most recent information regarding park access, closures, and conditions.
Check park alerts for the most recent information regarding park access, closures, and conditions.
A key component to improving fire management in Queensland’s National Parks has been developing Planned Burn Guidelines.
The guidelines give rangers and other land managers 'nuts and bolts' information and tools necessary to confidently identify fire management issues and implement planned burns, right down to ignition, so that staff can be confident in achieving and reporting on fire management objectives.
The guidelines are based on Queensland’s thirteen Bioregions, address Fire Vegetation Groups (groups of related ecosystems that share common fire management requirements), and have been developed via expert panel and regional consultation. The guidelines use indicators/benchmarks supported by photographs to help land managers identify fire related issues in the field, and contain specific guidance on forming fire management objectives and identifying suitable fire behaviour, weather conditions, and tactics to address the issues.
They assist rangers and other land managers to protect life and property; maintain healthy ecosystems; promote awareness of fire management issues in the field; identify clear fire management objectives to address those issues and how to assess objectives to assist in adaptive management; identify suitable fire behaviour, burn tactics and weather conditions to achieve objectives; and provide information and tools to assist in implementing planned burns.
While we acknowledge a wide range of individuals for their support in developing these bioregional planned burn guides, a special mention goes to the Queensland Herbarium who have worked closely with the department to produce the bioregional planned burn guidelines that work in collaboration with the Herbarium’s Regional Ecosystem Fire Management Guidelines.
The fire vegetation group spatial data files that directly link to each planned burn guide can be downloaded from the Queensland Spatial Catalogue (use the search term 'planned burn guidelines').
The planned burn guidelines are provided below as PDF files for printing purposes. Because of large file size, some have been split in sections to enable faster download and as a complete PDF to facilitate printing.
Map of bioregions
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