We review and compare well-studied examples of five large, infrequent disturbances (LIDs)—fire, hur-ricanes, tornadoes, volcanic eruptions, and floods—in terms of the physical processes involved, the damage patterns they create in forested land-scapes, and the potential impacts of those patterns on subsequent forest development. Our example
The disease triangle is a basic and highly flexible tool used extensively in forest pathology. By li...
Aim Large disturbances increasingly shape the world's forests. Concomitantly, increasing amounts of...
Many change agents in western forests, such as fire, wind, drought, and beetle outbreaks, are episod...
We review and compare well-studied examples of five large, infrequent disturbances (LIDs)—fire, hur-...
Ecosystem patterns and disturbance processes at one spatial scale often interact with processes at a...
Ecosystems and landscapes change over time as a function of vegetation characteristics and disturban...
Natural disturbances have been traditionally defined in terms of major catastrophic events originati...
Catastrophic wind disturbance events have profound impacts on forests in many parts of the world. As...
This is a book chapter within Simulation Modeling of Forest Landscape Disturbances. Forest landscape...
The study of treefall and its after-effects is a common theme in studies of forest structure and loc...
Disturbance refugia – locations that experience less severe or frequent disturbances than the surrou...
The structure of landscapes subject to patch-forming catastrophic disturbances, or “disturbance land...
Our attempts to gain knowledge from studying the effects of a single windstorm might be complicated ...
The study of treefall and its after-effects is a common theme in studies of forest structure and loc...
Natural disturbances in forests are driven by physical and biological processes. Large, landscape sc...
The disease triangle is a basic and highly flexible tool used extensively in forest pathology. By li...
Aim Large disturbances increasingly shape the world's forests. Concomitantly, increasing amounts of...
Many change agents in western forests, such as fire, wind, drought, and beetle outbreaks, are episod...
We review and compare well-studied examples of five large, infrequent disturbances (LIDs)—fire, hur-...
Ecosystem patterns and disturbance processes at one spatial scale often interact with processes at a...
Ecosystems and landscapes change over time as a function of vegetation characteristics and disturban...
Natural disturbances have been traditionally defined in terms of major catastrophic events originati...
Catastrophic wind disturbance events have profound impacts on forests in many parts of the world. As...
This is a book chapter within Simulation Modeling of Forest Landscape Disturbances. Forest landscape...
The study of treefall and its after-effects is a common theme in studies of forest structure and loc...
Disturbance refugia – locations that experience less severe or frequent disturbances than the surrou...
The structure of landscapes subject to patch-forming catastrophic disturbances, or “disturbance land...
Our attempts to gain knowledge from studying the effects of a single windstorm might be complicated ...
The study of treefall and its after-effects is a common theme in studies of forest structure and loc...
Natural disturbances in forests are driven by physical and biological processes. Large, landscape sc...
The disease triangle is a basic and highly flexible tool used extensively in forest pathology. By li...
Aim Large disturbances increasingly shape the world's forests. Concomitantly, increasing amounts of...
Many change agents in western forests, such as fire, wind, drought, and beetle outbreaks, are episod...