The history and influence of fires was studied at the forest-grassland ecotone in high valleys of southwestern Montana. Investigations were focused upon several sites having early landscape photographs and modern retakes that allow for detection of vegetational changes. Fire intervals were determined for these sites by analyzing fire scars on trees. Prior to 1910, mean fire intervals at Pseudotsuga forest-grassland ecotones were 35 to 40 years, and probably shorter in grassland proper. No fires were detected on the study areas after 1918. Photographic comparisons and field inspections show a substantial increase in mountain big sagebrush (Artemisia tridentata subsp. vaseyana) and conifers since 1900.This material was digitized as part of a ...
We examine records of Holocene fires and erosional response recorded in alluvial fan sediments from ...
Dendroecological, documentary, and ethnoecological evidence were combined to provide an integrated u...
This material was digitized as part of a cooperative project between the Society for Range Managemen...
A study of plant succession in relation to disturbance history was conducted in Douglas-fir [Pseudot...
Over the past century, trees have encroached into grass- and shrublands across western North America...
We reconstructed historical fire regimes of montane forest-grassland ecotones in the ~40,000 ha Vall...
We reconstructed historical fire regimes of montane forest-grassland ecotones in the ~40,000 ha Vall...
A landscape approach was used to study fire history and fire behavior in the Douglas-fir forests and...
Recent fire-scar studies in the northern Rocky Mountains have documented forest fire history over th...
A fire scar chronology was constructed from ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa Dougl. ex Laws.) and Roc...
The recent expansion of juniper into sagebrush steppe communities throughout the semiarid Intermount...
Fire history was determined by fire scar analysis in a subalpine watershed in Yellowstone National P...
I used archives of wildfire perimeters (fire atlases) within a geographic information system (GIS) t...
Fire is now recognized as a major ecosystem process and Yellowstone National Park has recently imple...
Fire is a dominant form of disturbance in the American west, and is a primary management concern bec...
We examine records of Holocene fires and erosional response recorded in alluvial fan sediments from ...
Dendroecological, documentary, and ethnoecological evidence were combined to provide an integrated u...
This material was digitized as part of a cooperative project between the Society for Range Managemen...
A study of plant succession in relation to disturbance history was conducted in Douglas-fir [Pseudot...
Over the past century, trees have encroached into grass- and shrublands across western North America...
We reconstructed historical fire regimes of montane forest-grassland ecotones in the ~40,000 ha Vall...
We reconstructed historical fire regimes of montane forest-grassland ecotones in the ~40,000 ha Vall...
A landscape approach was used to study fire history and fire behavior in the Douglas-fir forests and...
Recent fire-scar studies in the northern Rocky Mountains have documented forest fire history over th...
A fire scar chronology was constructed from ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa Dougl. ex Laws.) and Roc...
The recent expansion of juniper into sagebrush steppe communities throughout the semiarid Intermount...
Fire history was determined by fire scar analysis in a subalpine watershed in Yellowstone National P...
I used archives of wildfire perimeters (fire atlases) within a geographic information system (GIS) t...
Fire is now recognized as a major ecosystem process and Yellowstone National Park has recently imple...
Fire is a dominant form of disturbance in the American west, and is a primary management concern bec...
We examine records of Holocene fires and erosional response recorded in alluvial fan sediments from ...
Dendroecological, documentary, and ethnoecological evidence were combined to provide an integrated u...
This material was digitized as part of a cooperative project between the Society for Range Managemen...