Over the past 50 years, wildfire frequency and area burned have increased in the dry forests of western North America. To help reduce high surface fuel loads and potential wildfire severity, a variety of fuel treatments are applied. In spite of the common use of these management practices, there have been relatively few opportunities to quantitatively measure their efficacy in wildfires. That changed with the 2006 Tripod Complex fires in the Okanogan-Wenatchee National Forest in Washington—one of the largest fire events in Washington state over the past five decades. A serendipitous involvement of recent fuel treatments and the availability of pre-wildfire data provided a rare chance to study the effects of different types of fuel treatment...
In ponderosa pine ecosystems of the interior western United States, fuels reduction treatments are c...
Extreme wildfire seasons have become a central challenge of forest management in western North Ameri...
Several persistent questions related to wildfire economics and fuel treatment effectiveness continue...
Over the past 50 years, wildfire frequency and area burned have increased in the dry forests of west...
The 2006 Tripod Complex fires burned over 70,000 ha of dry mixed conifer forests in north-central Wa...
Strong scientific evidence has long been needed on the effectiveness of fuel treatments when subsequ...
The 2006 Tripod Complex fires burned over 70,000 ha of dry mixed conifer forests in north-central Wa...
Strong scientific evidence has long been needed on the effectiveness of fuel treatments when subsequ...
The fire situation in the United States is well documented with a growing prevalence of larger and m...
This report provides managers with the current state of knowledge regarding the effectiveness of fue...
The fire situation in the United States is well documented with a growing prevalence of larger and m...
Abstract: To address hazardous fuel accumulations, many fuel treatments are being implemented in dry...
In recent decades, more frequent, larger and more severe wildfires have erupted in dry forest types ...
In ponderosa pine ecosystems of the interior western United States, fuels reduction treatments are c...
Large wildfires (\u3e50,000 ha) are becoming increasingly common in semi-arid landscapes of the west...
In ponderosa pine ecosystems of the interior western United States, fuels reduction treatments are c...
Extreme wildfire seasons have become a central challenge of forest management in western North Ameri...
Several persistent questions related to wildfire economics and fuel treatment effectiveness continue...
Over the past 50 years, wildfire frequency and area burned have increased in the dry forests of west...
The 2006 Tripod Complex fires burned over 70,000 ha of dry mixed conifer forests in north-central Wa...
Strong scientific evidence has long been needed on the effectiveness of fuel treatments when subsequ...
The 2006 Tripod Complex fires burned over 70,000 ha of dry mixed conifer forests in north-central Wa...
Strong scientific evidence has long been needed on the effectiveness of fuel treatments when subsequ...
The fire situation in the United States is well documented with a growing prevalence of larger and m...
This report provides managers with the current state of knowledge regarding the effectiveness of fue...
The fire situation in the United States is well documented with a growing prevalence of larger and m...
Abstract: To address hazardous fuel accumulations, many fuel treatments are being implemented in dry...
In recent decades, more frequent, larger and more severe wildfires have erupted in dry forest types ...
In ponderosa pine ecosystems of the interior western United States, fuels reduction treatments are c...
Large wildfires (\u3e50,000 ha) are becoming increasingly common in semi-arid landscapes of the west...
In ponderosa pine ecosystems of the interior western United States, fuels reduction treatments are c...
Extreme wildfire seasons have become a central challenge of forest management in western North Ameri...
Several persistent questions related to wildfire economics and fuel treatment effectiveness continue...