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Landscape‐scale impacts of Cyclone Larry on the forests of northeast Australia,including comparisons with previous cyclones impacting the region between 1858 and 2006
Authors:STEPHEN M TURTON
Institution:JCU/CSIRO Tropical Landscapes Joint Venture, Australian Tropical Forest Institute, James Cook University, PO Box 6811, Cairns 4870, Australia (Email: Steve.Turton@jcu.edu.au)
Abstract:Abstract Cyclone Larry (category 4) was the most severe cyclone to impact on the Wet Tropics bioregion since the devastating 1918 Innisfail cyclone. Based on an analysis of earlier cyclones impacting on this region over the period 1856–2006, it was determined that Larry was a ‘1 in 50 year’ event. This paper provides an overview of the landscape‐scale impacts of Larry on the forest ecosystems of the Wet Tropics region, based on low‐level helicopter surveys 2 weeks after the event. Cyclone Larry has been described as a ‘midget’ cyclone. Severe forest damage only extended about 30 km from the central track of the cyclone while moderate to severe damage extended some 50 km. Moderate to slight canopy disturbance was rarely identified more than 75 km from the centre of the cyclone's track. Beyond 75 km, forest damage was restricted to exposed areas of elevated terrain and in places exposed to strong lee (gravity) waves from the west. The ecological role of cyclones as important disturbance agents affecting the structure and function of forest ecosystems in the region is discussed, followed by an evaluation of likely effects of climate change on cyclone frequency and intensity.
Keywords:climate change  cyclone  disturbance  frequency  intensity  rainforest
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