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A century of vegetation change in the San Juan Mountains, Colorado: An analysis using repeat photography

Citation

William L Baker, and James L Zier, A century of vegetation change in the San Juan Mountains, Colorado: An analysis using repeat photography: .

Summary

Repeat photography samples were used to analyze how the structure and site-specific distribution of forests may or may not have changed during the past century in the San Juan Mountains, Colorado. Systematic evaluation of 146 photosets was combined with field observations to identify trends in vegetation change. Both conifers and deciduous trees (e.g., aspen) have increased in extent. Forest recovery from large disturbances that occurred during Euro-American settlement contributed substantially to this increase. Trees also encroached into grass/shrublands, but less than half of photosets show tree invasion, and invasion is more common in small grass/shrubland openings interspersed with forest than in large openings. Establishment of [...]

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  • Upper Colorado River Basin

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From Source - Mendeley RIS export <br> On - Tue May 10 10:06:21 CDT 2011

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Title Citation A century of vegetation change in the San Juan Mountains, Colorado: An analysis using repeat photography

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