A study of plant succession in relation to disturbance history was conducted in Douglas-fir [Pseudotsuga menziesii var. glauca (Beissn.) Franco] forest and fescue (Festuca L. spp.) grassland communities along the eastern slope of the Continental Divide in Montana. The objective was to obtain ecological information needed for assessing management alternatives aimed at enhancing big game habitat and livestock forage. Fire history was reconstructed through analysis of fire scars and age classes of trees. Sizes and ages were inventoried in sapling stage, pole stage, and mature forest stands. Results indicate that prior to 1890 fires occurring every few decades favored grassland and confined tree growth to rocky or topographically moist sites. S...
Fire history was determined by fire scar analysis in a subalpine watershed in Yellowstone National P...
Influences of livestock grazing on community structure, fire intensity, and normal fire frequency in...
Prescribed fires are important for rangeland restoration and affect plant community composition and ...
Over the past century, trees have encroached into grass- and shrublands across western North America...
The history and influence of fires was studied at the forest-grassland ecotone in high valleys of so...
The United States Northern Great Plains (NGP) has a high potential for landscape-scale conservation,...
A bulldozed fire line is a fire-suppression technique that limits fire movement by altering fuel con...
How have changes in land management practices affected vegetation patterns in the greater Yellowston...
In the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, aspen woodlands represent a low proportion of total cover, but...
In the Morse Creek drainage of the northeastern Olympic Mountains in Washington state, USA, montane ...
Woody perennials have invaded semiarid grasslands throughout the Southwestern United States. This in...
Before 1800, frequent fires maintained Idaho fescue prairies and Garry oak woodlands on Fort Lewis. ...
ABSTRACT A Century of Change in Forest Structure and Fire Regime Condition Class in a Western Montan...
Population dynamics of herbaceous and shrub species were investigated in big sagebrush/Thurber needl...
Fires burned almost 45% of Yellowstone National Park in 1988. The goal of this dissertation research...
Fire history was determined by fire scar analysis in a subalpine watershed in Yellowstone National P...
Influences of livestock grazing on community structure, fire intensity, and normal fire frequency in...
Prescribed fires are important for rangeland restoration and affect plant community composition and ...
Over the past century, trees have encroached into grass- and shrublands across western North America...
The history and influence of fires was studied at the forest-grassland ecotone in high valleys of so...
The United States Northern Great Plains (NGP) has a high potential for landscape-scale conservation,...
A bulldozed fire line is a fire-suppression technique that limits fire movement by altering fuel con...
How have changes in land management practices affected vegetation patterns in the greater Yellowston...
In the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, aspen woodlands represent a low proportion of total cover, but...
In the Morse Creek drainage of the northeastern Olympic Mountains in Washington state, USA, montane ...
Woody perennials have invaded semiarid grasslands throughout the Southwestern United States. This in...
Before 1800, frequent fires maintained Idaho fescue prairies and Garry oak woodlands on Fort Lewis. ...
ABSTRACT A Century of Change in Forest Structure and Fire Regime Condition Class in a Western Montan...
Population dynamics of herbaceous and shrub species were investigated in big sagebrush/Thurber needl...
Fires burned almost 45% of Yellowstone National Park in 1988. The goal of this dissertation research...
Fire history was determined by fire scar analysis in a subalpine watershed in Yellowstone National P...
Influences of livestock grazing on community structure, fire intensity, and normal fire frequency in...
Prescribed fires are important for rangeland restoration and affect plant community composition and ...