Chaparral shrubs in southern California may be vulnerable to frequent fire and severe drought. Drought may diminish postfire recovery or worsen impact of short-interval fires. Field-based studies have not shown the extent and magnitude of drought effects on recovery, which may vary among chaparral types and climatic zones. We tracked regional patterns of shrub cover based on June-solstice Landsat Normalized Difference Vegetation Index series, compared between the periods 1984-1989 and 2014-2018. High spatial resolution ortho-imagery was used to map shrub cover in distributed sample plots, to empirically constrain the Landsat-based estimates of mature-stage lateral canopy recovery. We evaluated precipitation, climatic water deficit (CWD), an...
AbstractThe Western United States is expected to undergo both extended periods of drought and longer...
Rapid recovery of pioneer shrub and forest patch cover can reduce soil erosion, nutrient runoff and ...
Wildfires are a common occurrence in chaparral shrublands, and post-fire patterns of biomass accumul...
Regrowth after fire is critical to the persistence of chaparral shrub communities in southern Califo...
Large wildfires occur regularly in southern California and disturb a variety of vegetation communiti...
Temporal trajectories of apparent vegetation abundance based on the multi-decadal Landsat image seri...
Abstract. In recent decades, fire frequency has increased with population growth at the wildland–urb...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 50-53).Wildfires are a common occurrence in California sh...
Over the past couple of decades, fires have experienced changes on a global scale. These changing fi...
Increased fire frequency has been shown to promote alien plant invasions in the western United State...
The increased occurrences of drought and fire may be contributing to the loss of biodiverse ecosyste...
Wildfire return intervals are expected to decrease in shrubland communities across southern Californ...
2020 Fall.Includes bibliographical references.Great Basin shrublands in the United States are rapidl...
Postfire shifts in vegetation composition will have broad ecological impacts. However, information c...
We examined the response of eleven species of chaparral shrubs in the Santa Monica Mountains to hist...
AbstractThe Western United States is expected to undergo both extended periods of drought and longer...
Rapid recovery of pioneer shrub and forest patch cover can reduce soil erosion, nutrient runoff and ...
Wildfires are a common occurrence in chaparral shrublands, and post-fire patterns of biomass accumul...
Regrowth after fire is critical to the persistence of chaparral shrub communities in southern Califo...
Large wildfires occur regularly in southern California and disturb a variety of vegetation communiti...
Temporal trajectories of apparent vegetation abundance based on the multi-decadal Landsat image seri...
Abstract. In recent decades, fire frequency has increased with population growth at the wildland–urb...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 50-53).Wildfires are a common occurrence in California sh...
Over the past couple of decades, fires have experienced changes on a global scale. These changing fi...
Increased fire frequency has been shown to promote alien plant invasions in the western United State...
The increased occurrences of drought and fire may be contributing to the loss of biodiverse ecosyste...
Wildfire return intervals are expected to decrease in shrubland communities across southern Californ...
2020 Fall.Includes bibliographical references.Great Basin shrublands in the United States are rapidl...
Postfire shifts in vegetation composition will have broad ecological impacts. However, information c...
We examined the response of eleven species of chaparral shrubs in the Santa Monica Mountains to hist...
AbstractThe Western United States is expected to undergo both extended periods of drought and longer...
Rapid recovery of pioneer shrub and forest patch cover can reduce soil erosion, nutrient runoff and ...
Wildfires are a common occurrence in chaparral shrublands, and post-fire patterns of biomass accumul...