Managing fire-prone forests in the western United States
about
Wildfire exposure analysis on the national forests in the Pacific Northwest, USA.Development at the wildland-urban interface and the mitigation of forest-fire risk.Demographic patterns of a widespread long-lived tree are associated with rainfall and disturbances along rainfall gradients in SE Australia.Learning to coexist with wildfire.Outreach programs, peer pressure, and common sense: what motivates homeowners to mitigate wildfire risk?Meta-analysis of avian and small-mammal response to fire severity and fire surrogate treatments in U.S. fire-prone forests.Modelling associations between public understanding, engagement and forest conditions in the Inland Northwest, USAOptimal fire histories for biodiversity conservation.Societal challenges in understanding and responding to regime shifts in forest landscapesClimatic and Landscape Influences on Fire Regimes from 1984 to 2010 in the Western United StatesPyrodiversity begets plant-pollinator community diversity.Average Stand Age from Forest Inventory Plots Does Not Describe Historical Fire Regimes in Ponderosa Pine and Mixed-Conifer Forests of Western North America.How risk management can prevent future wildfire disasters in the wildland-urban interfaceLegal barriers to effective ecosystem management: exploring linkages between liability, regulations, and prescribed fire.Human and biophysical influences on fire occurrence in the United States.The ecological importance of severe wildfires: some like it hot.Perspectives on disconnects between scientific information and management decisions on post-fire recovery in Western US.An ecosystem services approach to the ecological effects of salvage logging: valuation of seed dispersal.Shifting demographic conflicts across recruitment cohorts in a dynamic post-disturbance landscape.Visions of Restoration in Fire-Adapted Forest Landscapes: Lessons from the Collaborative Forest Landscape Restoration Program.Community occupancy responses of small mammals to restoration treatments in ponderosa pine forests, northern Arizona, USA.Thresholds in forest bird occurrence as a function of the amount of early-seral broadleaf forest at landscape scales.Fire and forest history at Mount Rushmore.Management of novel ecosystems: are novel approaches required?Organic mound-building ants: their impact on soil properties in temperate and boreal forestsHerbivory and fire interact to affect forest understory habitat, but not its use by small vertebratesLarge forest fires in mainland Portugal, brief characterizationFire history of mixed conifer ecosystems in the Great Basin/Mojave Deserts transition zone, Nevada, USARapidly evolving ultrafine and fine mode biomass smoke physical properties: Comparing laboratory and field resultsHistorical (1860) forest structure in ponderosa pine forests of the northern Front Range, ColoradoThe fire frequency-severity relationship and the legacy of fire suppression in California forestsMixed-severity fire regimes: lessons and hypotheses from the Klamath-Siskiyou Ecoregion
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Managing fire-prone forests in the western United States
description
article
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im November 2006 veröffentlichter wissenschaftlicher Artikel
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wetenschappelijk artikel
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наукова стаття, опублікована в листопаді 2006
@uk
ലേഖനം
@ml
name
Managing fire-prone forests in the western United States
@en
Managing fire-prone forests in the western United States
@nl
type
label
Managing fire-prone forests in the western United States
@en
Managing fire-prone forests in the western United States
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prefLabel
Managing fire-prone forests in the western United States
@en
Managing fire-prone forests in the western United States
@nl
P2093
P1476
Managing fire-prone forests in the western United States
@en
P2093
Jerry F. Franklin
Peter B. Moyle
Reed F. Noss
Tania Schoennagel
William L. Baker
P304
P356
10.1890/1540-9295(2006)4[481:MFFITW]2.0.CO;2
P577
2006-11-01T00:00:00Z