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Climate Change and Fire
Year of Publication
2013
Publication Type
Assessing social vulnerability to climate change in human communities near public forests and grasslands: A framework for resource managers and planners
Year of Publication
2013
Publication Type
Public land management agencies have incorporated the concept of vulnerability into protocols for assessing and planning for climate change impacts on public forests and grasslands. However, resource managers and planners have little guidance for how to address the social aspects of vulnerability in these assessments and plans.
Relationships between climate and macroscale area burned in the western United States
Year of Publication
2013
Publication Type
Increased wildfire activity (e.g. number of starts, area burned, fire behaviour) across the western United States in recent decades has heightened interest in resolving climate–fire relationships.
Effects of salvage logging and pile-and-burn on fuel loading, potential fire behavior, fuel consumption and emissions
Year of Publication
2013
Publication Type
We used a combination of field measurements and simulation modelling to quantify the effects of salvage logging, and a combination of salvage logging and pile-and-burn fuel surface fuel treatment (treatment combination), on fuel loadings, fire behaviour, fuel consumption and pollutant emissions at three points in time: post-windstorm (before salvage logging), post-salvage logging and post-surfa
Assessing potential climate change effects on vegetation using a linked model approach
Year of Publication
2013
Publication Type
We developed a process that links the mechanistic power of dynamic global vegetation models with the detailed vegetation dynamics of state-and-transition models to project local vegetation shifts driven by projected climate change.
Conifer regeneration following stand-replacing wildfires varies along an elevation gradient in a ponderosa pine forest, Oregon, USA
Year of Publication
2013
Publication Type
Climate change is expected to increase disturbances such as stand-replacing wildfire in many ecosystems, which have the potential to drive rapid turnover in ecological communities. Ecosystem recovery, and therefore maintenance of critical structures and functions (resilience), is likely to vary across environmental gradients such as moisture availability, but has received little study.
Climate stress increases forest fire severity across the western United States
Year of Publication
2013
Publication Type
Pervasive warming can lead to chronic stress on forest trees, which may contribute to mortality resultingfrom fire-caused injuries. Longitudinal analyses of forest plots from across the western US show that highpre-fire climatic water deficit was related to increased post-fire tree mortality probabilities.
Forest Protection and Forest Harvest as Strategies for Ecological Sustainability and Climate Change Mitigation
Year of Publication
2012
Publication Type
An important consideration in forest management to mitigate climate change is the balance between forest carbon (C) storage and ecological sustainability.
Climate Change, Forests, Fire, Water, and Fish: Building Resilient Landscapes, Streams, and Managers
Year of Publication
2012
Publication Type
Fire will play an important role in shaping forest and stream ecosystems as the climate changes. Historic observations show increased dryness accompanying more widespread fire and forest die-off. These events punctuate gradual changes to ecosystems and sometimes generate stepwise changes in ecosystems. Climate vulnerability assessments need to account for fire in their calculus.
Climate Change, Forests, Fire, Water, and Fish: Building Resilient Landscapes, Streams, and Managers
Year of Publication
2012
Publication Type
Fire will play an important role in shaping forest and stream ecosystems as the climate changes. Historic observations show increased dryness accompanying more widespread fire and forest die-off. These events punctuate gradual changes to ecosystems and sometimes generate stepwise changes in ecosystems. Climate vulnerability assessments need to account for fire in their calculus.
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