Locations within forest fires that remain unburned or burn at low severity—known as fire refugia—are important components of contemporary burn mosaics, but their composition and structure at regional scales are poorly understood. Focusing on recent, large wildfires across the US Pacific Northwest (Oregon and Washington), our research objectives are to (1) classify fire refugia and burn severity based on relativized spectral change in Landsat time series; (2) quantify the pre-fire composition and structure of mapped fire refugia; (3) in forested areas, assess the relative abundance of fire refugia and other burn severity classes across forest composition and structure types. We analyzed a random sample of 99 recent fires in forest-dominated ...
Plot data from the Forest Inventory and Analysis (FIA) Program can be combined with spatially explic...
Under a rapidly warming climate, a critical management issue in semiarid forests of western North Am...
Climate warming, land use change, and altered fire regimes are driving ecological transformations th...
Locations within forest fires that remain unburned or burn at low severity—known as fire refugia—are...
Fire refugia are ecologically important features on the landscape. Fire refugia are becoming an incr...
A warming climate, fire exclusion, and land cover changes are altering the conditions that produced ...
Fire refugia — locations that burn less severely or less frequently than surrounding areas — support...
In fire-adapted forest ecosystems, spatial heterogeneity of fire effects is essential to maintaining...
Wildfires in forest ecosystems produce landscape mosaics that include relatively unaffected areas, t...
Wildfire refugia are forest patches that are minimally-impacted by fire and provide critical habitat...
Wildfires pose a unique challenge to conservation in fire‐prone regions, yet few studies quantify th...
Fire plays an important role in shaping landscape patterns and ecological processes in many ecosyste...
Wildland fire is an important natural process in many ecosystems. However, fire exclusion has re-duc...
The spatial patterns resulting from large fires include refugial habitats that support surviving leg...
Fire refugia – the unburned areas within fire perimeters – are important to the survival of many tax...
Plot data from the Forest Inventory and Analysis (FIA) Program can be combined with spatially explic...
Under a rapidly warming climate, a critical management issue in semiarid forests of western North Am...
Climate warming, land use change, and altered fire regimes are driving ecological transformations th...
Locations within forest fires that remain unburned or burn at low severity—known as fire refugia—are...
Fire refugia are ecologically important features on the landscape. Fire refugia are becoming an incr...
A warming climate, fire exclusion, and land cover changes are altering the conditions that produced ...
Fire refugia — locations that burn less severely or less frequently than surrounding areas — support...
In fire-adapted forest ecosystems, spatial heterogeneity of fire effects is essential to maintaining...
Wildfires in forest ecosystems produce landscape mosaics that include relatively unaffected areas, t...
Wildfire refugia are forest patches that are minimally-impacted by fire and provide critical habitat...
Wildfires pose a unique challenge to conservation in fire‐prone regions, yet few studies quantify th...
Fire plays an important role in shaping landscape patterns and ecological processes in many ecosyste...
Wildland fire is an important natural process in many ecosystems. However, fire exclusion has re-duc...
The spatial patterns resulting from large fires include refugial habitats that support surviving leg...
Fire refugia – the unburned areas within fire perimeters – are important to the survival of many tax...
Plot data from the Forest Inventory and Analysis (FIA) Program can be combined with spatially explic...
Under a rapidly warming climate, a critical management issue in semiarid forests of western North Am...
Climate warming, land use change, and altered fire regimes are driving ecological transformations th...