Recent fire-scar studies in the northern Rocky Mountains have documented forest fire history over the past few centuries. They reveal that in some forest types fire maintained many-aged open stands of seral trees. In other types, major fires caused replacement of the stands. Often, however, fires burned at variable intensities, creating a mosaic of stands differing in composition and structure
A landscape approach was used to study fire history and fire behavior in the Douglas-fir forests and...
Fire history was determined by fire scar analysis in a subalpine watershed in Yellowstone National P...
A key issue in ecosystem management in the western U.S. is the determination of the historic range o...
Recent fire-scar studies in the northern Rocky Mountains have documented forest fire history over th...
Reconstructing historical fire regimes is difficult at the landscape scale, but essential to determi...
The history and influence of fires was studied at the forest-grassland ecotone in high valleys of so...
Rocky Mountain bristlecone pine (Pinus aristata Engelm) and limber pine (P. flexilis James) are high...
In the northern Colorado Front Range, fire suppression during the 20th century is believed to have c...
Fire has had a major role in shaping the forested landscapes of the American West. In recent decades...
Fire is a dominant form of disturbance in the American west, and is a primary management concern bec...
Forest fires in southeastern British Columbia are considered the dominant natural disturbance to hav...
In the subalpine forests of the Colorado Rocky Mountains, research on disturbances that have occurre...
We examine records of Holocene fires and erosional response recorded in alluvial fan sediments from ...
Proper management of naturally forested landscapes requires knowledge of key disturbance processes a...
To the best of our knowledge, one or more authors of this paper were federal employees when contribu...
A landscape approach was used to study fire history and fire behavior in the Douglas-fir forests and...
Fire history was determined by fire scar analysis in a subalpine watershed in Yellowstone National P...
A key issue in ecosystem management in the western U.S. is the determination of the historic range o...
Recent fire-scar studies in the northern Rocky Mountains have documented forest fire history over th...
Reconstructing historical fire regimes is difficult at the landscape scale, but essential to determi...
The history and influence of fires was studied at the forest-grassland ecotone in high valleys of so...
Rocky Mountain bristlecone pine (Pinus aristata Engelm) and limber pine (P. flexilis James) are high...
In the northern Colorado Front Range, fire suppression during the 20th century is believed to have c...
Fire has had a major role in shaping the forested landscapes of the American West. In recent decades...
Fire is a dominant form of disturbance in the American west, and is a primary management concern bec...
Forest fires in southeastern British Columbia are considered the dominant natural disturbance to hav...
In the subalpine forests of the Colorado Rocky Mountains, research on disturbances that have occurre...
We examine records of Holocene fires and erosional response recorded in alluvial fan sediments from ...
Proper management of naturally forested landscapes requires knowledge of key disturbance processes a...
To the best of our knowledge, one or more authors of this paper were federal employees when contribu...
A landscape approach was used to study fire history and fire behavior in the Douglas-fir forests and...
Fire history was determined by fire scar analysis in a subalpine watershed in Yellowstone National P...
A key issue in ecosystem management in the western U.S. is the determination of the historic range o...