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Fire intensity impacts on post-fire temperate coniferous forest net primary productivity

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Sparks, Aaron M., Kolden, Crystal A., Smith, Alistair M. S., Boschetti, Luigi, Johnson, Daniel M., and Cochrane, Mark A., Fire intensity impacts on post-fire temperate coniferous forest net primary productivity: Biogeosciences, v. 15, iss. 4.

Summary

Abstract (from Biogeosciences): Fire is a dynamic ecological process in forests and impacts the carbon (C) cycle through direct combustion emissions, tree mortality, and by impairing the ability of surviving trees to sequester carbon. While studies on young trees have demonstrated that fire intensity is a determinant of post-fire net primary productivity, wildland fires on landscape to regional scales have largely been assumed to either cause tree mortality, or conversely, cause no physiological impact, ignoring the impacted but surviving trees. Our objective was to understand how fire intensity affects post-fire net primary productivity in conifer-dominated forested ecosystems on the spatial scale of large wildland fires. We examined [...]

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  • National and Regional Climate Adaptation Science Centers
  • Northwest CASC

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Organization
Drought, Fire and Extreme Weather
Landscapes
Science Themes
NCCWSC Science Themes
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journalBiogeosciences
parts
typevolume
value15
typeissue
value4
typeissn
value1726-4170
typedoi
valuehttps://doi.org/10.5194/bg-15-1173-2018
typestartPage
value1173
typeendPage
value1183

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