Historically, wildfires in mixed conifer forests of Southwestern sky islands were frequent events. Dendrochronological methods were used to reconstruct fire regimes and stand age structures in the Huachuca Mountains of Southeastern Arizona. Pre-settlement (i.e., before ca. 1870) fire intervals ranged from 4 to 10 years, with many fires spreading over the entire sample area. Stand age distributions show an increase in more shade-tolerant tree species. Although ponderosa pine is still the dominant overstory tree species, recent recruitment is predominantly southwestern white pine and Douglas-fir. Establishment of Ft. Huachuca in 1877 was a precursor to extensive use of timber, mineral, range and water resources in the Huachuca Mountains. The ...
The recent expansion of juniper into sagebrush steppe communities throughout the semiarid Intermount...
We reconstructed historical fire regimes of montane forest-grassland ecotones in the ~40,000 ha Vall...
Old-growth forests are biologically and ecologically valuable systems that are disappearing worldwid...
At regional scales climate patterns (e.g., interannual wet-dry cycles) result in high spatial fire s...
Abstract. We reconstructed historical fire regimes and contemporary and historical stand structures ...
dynamics In southwestern North America, large-scale climate patterns appear to exert control on mois...
Dendroecological, documentary, and ethnoecological evidence were combined to provide an integrated u...
Local newspaper accounts of wildfires in southeastern Arizona between 1859 and 1890 demonstrate that...
Fire history and fire-climate relationships of upper elevation forests of the southwestern United St...
The purpose of this study was to reconstruct historical fire regimes along an elevation and vegetati...
Frequent, low-intensity fire regimes are keystone ecological processes in long-needled pine forests ...
As an ecological disturbance agent, wildfire is highly responsive to spatial and temporal variables....
Fire regime characteristics of high-elevation forests on the North Rim of the Grand Canyon, Arizona,...
We reconstructed historical fire regimes of montane forest-grassland ecotones in the ~40,000 ha Vall...
Fire regime characteristics of high-elevation forests on the North Rim of the Grand Canyon, Arizona,...
The recent expansion of juniper into sagebrush steppe communities throughout the semiarid Intermount...
We reconstructed historical fire regimes of montane forest-grassland ecotones in the ~40,000 ha Vall...
Old-growth forests are biologically and ecologically valuable systems that are disappearing worldwid...
At regional scales climate patterns (e.g., interannual wet-dry cycles) result in high spatial fire s...
Abstract. We reconstructed historical fire regimes and contemporary and historical stand structures ...
dynamics In southwestern North America, large-scale climate patterns appear to exert control on mois...
Dendroecological, documentary, and ethnoecological evidence were combined to provide an integrated u...
Local newspaper accounts of wildfires in southeastern Arizona between 1859 and 1890 demonstrate that...
Fire history and fire-climate relationships of upper elevation forests of the southwestern United St...
The purpose of this study was to reconstruct historical fire regimes along an elevation and vegetati...
Frequent, low-intensity fire regimes are keystone ecological processes in long-needled pine forests ...
As an ecological disturbance agent, wildfire is highly responsive to spatial and temporal variables....
Fire regime characteristics of high-elevation forests on the North Rim of the Grand Canyon, Arizona,...
We reconstructed historical fire regimes of montane forest-grassland ecotones in the ~40,000 ha Vall...
Fire regime characteristics of high-elevation forests on the North Rim of the Grand Canyon, Arizona,...
The recent expansion of juniper into sagebrush steppe communities throughout the semiarid Intermount...
We reconstructed historical fire regimes of montane forest-grassland ecotones in the ~40,000 ha Vall...
Old-growth forests are biologically and ecologically valuable systems that are disappearing worldwid...