The General Land Office (GLO) survey notes (1840-1856) were used to examine the interaction among natural disturbance, vegetation type, and topography in the presettlement forests of the Luce District, an ecological unit of approximately 902 000 ha in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, U.S.A. The surveyors recorded 104 fire and 126 windthrow incidences covering 3.1 and 2.8% of the total length of the surveyed lines, respectively. The rotation periods over the entire landscape were 480 years for fire and 541 years for windthrow, but these varied with vegetation type and topographic position. Fire occurred more frequently on southerly aspects and at elevations where pinelands were concentrated. The density of windthrow events increased with ele...
System is characterized by transitional landforms between northern hardwood uplands (Lake Superior&a...
The study was performed to see if species composition, species richness, and species diversity was d...
Oak woodland persisted until 300 years ago, when elm, basswood, and sugar maple rapidly expanded and...
General Land Office (GLO) survey notes (1840-1856), current land cover generated from Landsat TM Ima...
Forest composition within a local landscape is influenced by physical site characteristics and preva...
In northern lower Michigan, logging accelerated sugar maple (Acer saccharum) dominance in a northern...
We studied the relationships of landscape ecosystems to historical and contemporary fire regimes acr...
Land survey records of 1793—1827 containing forest data for 1.65 x 106 ha of northern Maine were ana...
General Land Office survey records of 1838-1846 were used to reconstruct the pre-European settlement...
Following clear-cutting and fire, the change in species composition through time is the process of s...
Ecological succession is a defined sequence of communities that appear after a disturbance has occur...
Differences in vegetation structure, fuel loadings, and the indicator value of ecological species we...
The Great Lakes-Northeastern forest region from Minnesota to New England has varied climates and sit...
Forest succession involves species change over time following a disturbance in the environment. This...
A vegetation survey was initiated to monitor the pattern of natural revegetation resulting from a 19...
System is characterized by transitional landforms between northern hardwood uplands (Lake Superior&a...
The study was performed to see if species composition, species richness, and species diversity was d...
Oak woodland persisted until 300 years ago, when elm, basswood, and sugar maple rapidly expanded and...
General Land Office (GLO) survey notes (1840-1856), current land cover generated from Landsat TM Ima...
Forest composition within a local landscape is influenced by physical site characteristics and preva...
In northern lower Michigan, logging accelerated sugar maple (Acer saccharum) dominance in a northern...
We studied the relationships of landscape ecosystems to historical and contemporary fire regimes acr...
Land survey records of 1793—1827 containing forest data for 1.65 x 106 ha of northern Maine were ana...
General Land Office survey records of 1838-1846 were used to reconstruct the pre-European settlement...
Following clear-cutting and fire, the change in species composition through time is the process of s...
Ecological succession is a defined sequence of communities that appear after a disturbance has occur...
Differences in vegetation structure, fuel loadings, and the indicator value of ecological species we...
The Great Lakes-Northeastern forest region from Minnesota to New England has varied climates and sit...
Forest succession involves species change over time following a disturbance in the environment. This...
A vegetation survey was initiated to monitor the pattern of natural revegetation resulting from a 19...
System is characterized by transitional landforms between northern hardwood uplands (Lake Superior&a...
The study was performed to see if species composition, species richness, and species diversity was d...
Oak woodland persisted until 300 years ago, when elm, basswood, and sugar maple rapidly expanded and...