Zobrazeno 1 - 6
of 6
pro vyhledávání: '"Anne Hopkins Pfaff"'
Publikováno v:
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 114:13750-13755
Growing human and ecological costs due to increasing wildfire are an urgent concern in policy and management, particularly given projections of worsening fire conditions under climate change. Thus, understanding the relationship between climatic vari
Publikováno v:
International Journal of Wildland Fire. 30:255
History of prescription burning and wildfires in the three Sierra Nevada National Park Service (NPS) parks and adjacent US Forest Service (USFS) forests is presented. Annual prescription (Rx) burns began in 1968 in Sequoia and Kings Canyon National P
Autor:
Patricia K. Haggerty, Koren R. Nydick, Tedmund J. Swiecki, Adrian J. Das, Anne Hopkins Pfaff, Nicholas J. Ampersee, Elizabeth A. Bernhardt, Nathan L. Stephenson
Publikováno v:
Madroño. 66:164
Blue oak woodlands in California have been a focus of conservation concern for many years. Numerous studies have found that existing seedling and sapling numbers are inadequate to sustain current populations, and recent work has suggested that blue o
Autor:
Thomas W. McGinnis, Jonathan C. B. Nesmith, Anthony C. Caprio, Jon E. Keeley, Anne Hopkins Pfaff
Publikováno v:
Forest Ecology and Management. 261:1275-1282
Current goals for prescription burning are focused on measures of fuel consumption and changes in forest density. These benchmarks, however, do not address the extent to which prescription burning meets perceived ecosystem needs of heterogeneity in b
Publikováno v:
Ecological applications : a publication of the Ecological Society of America. 18(6)
Chaparral shrublands burn in large high-intensity crown fires. Managers interested in how these wildfires affect ecosystem processes generally rely on surrogate measures of fire intensity known as fire severity metrics. In shrublands burned in the au
Publikováno v:
International Journal of Wildland Fire. 14:255
A substantial portion of chaparral shrublands in the southern part of California’s Sierra Nevada Mountain Range has never had a recorded fire since record keeping began in 1910. We hypothesised that such long periods without fire are outside the hi