Recent studies in the Western United States have supported climate scenarios that predict a higher occurrence of large and severe wildfires. Knowledge of the severity is important to infer long-term biogeochemical, ecological, and societal impacts, but understanding the sensitivity of any severity mapping method to variations in soil type and increasing charcoal (char) cover is essential before widespread adoption. Through repeated spectral analysis of increasing charcoal quantities on six representative soils, we found that addition of charcoal to each soil resulted in linear spectral mixing. We found that performance of the Normalised Burn Ratio was highly sensitive to soil type, whereas the Normalised Difference Vegetation Index was rela...
Fire is a key Earth system process, with 80% of annual fire activity taking place in grassland areas...
Abstract. Although charcoal represents a relatively minor portion of available biomass burned in wil...
To the best of our knowledge, one or more authors of this paper were federal employees when contribu...
Recent studies in the Western United States have supported climate scenarios that predict a higher o...
This is the final version. Available on open access from CSIRO Publishing via the DOI in this record...
Citation: Leys, B., Brewer, S. C., McConaghy, S., Mueller, J., & McLauchlan, K. K. (2015). Fire hist...
Temperate conifer forests in the Colorado Front Range are fire-adapted ecosystems where wildland fir...
This thesis develops the charcoal reflectance method into a novel metric with which to assess fire s...
Charcoal plays an important role in boreal soil function and carbon storage, and is present in most ...
Preliminary results are presented from ongoing research on spatial variability of fire effects on so...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Frontiers Media via the DOI in this recordH...
In the summer of 2002, the 200,000-ha Biscuit Wildfire consumed a portion of the 150-ha Long-Term E...
Depending on severity, wildfires can slow forest regrowth, the more intense fires removing soil orga...
Burn severity is mapped after wildfires to evaluate immediate and long-term fire effects on the land...
Wildfires are key drivers of changes in soils and the ecosystems. The temperatures reached during a ...
Fire is a key Earth system process, with 80% of annual fire activity taking place in grassland areas...
Abstract. Although charcoal represents a relatively minor portion of available biomass burned in wil...
To the best of our knowledge, one or more authors of this paper were federal employees when contribu...
Recent studies in the Western United States have supported climate scenarios that predict a higher o...
This is the final version. Available on open access from CSIRO Publishing via the DOI in this record...
Citation: Leys, B., Brewer, S. C., McConaghy, S., Mueller, J., & McLauchlan, K. K. (2015). Fire hist...
Temperate conifer forests in the Colorado Front Range are fire-adapted ecosystems where wildland fir...
This thesis develops the charcoal reflectance method into a novel metric with which to assess fire s...
Charcoal plays an important role in boreal soil function and carbon storage, and is present in most ...
Preliminary results are presented from ongoing research on spatial variability of fire effects on so...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Frontiers Media via the DOI in this recordH...
In the summer of 2002, the 200,000-ha Biscuit Wildfire consumed a portion of the 150-ha Long-Term E...
Depending on severity, wildfires can slow forest regrowth, the more intense fires removing soil orga...
Burn severity is mapped after wildfires to evaluate immediate and long-term fire effects on the land...
Wildfires are key drivers of changes in soils and the ecosystems. The temperatures reached during a ...
Fire is a key Earth system process, with 80% of annual fire activity taking place in grassland areas...
Abstract. Although charcoal represents a relatively minor portion of available biomass burned in wil...
To the best of our knowledge, one or more authors of this paper were federal employees when contribu...