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Rapid Fuel Recovery after Stand-Replacing Fire in Closed-Cone Pine Forests and Implications for Short-Interval Severe Reburns

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Michelle C Agne, Joseph B Fontaine, Neal J Enright, Sarah M Bisbing, and Brian Harvey, 2023, Rapid Fuel Recovery after Stand-Replacing Fire in Closed-Cone Pine Forests and Implications for Short-Interval Severe Reburns: Forest Ecology and Management, v. 545. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foreco.2023.121263

Summary

Accelerating disturbance activity under a warming climate increases the potential for multiple disturbances to overlap and produce compound effects that erode ecosystem resilience — the capacity to experience disturbance without transitioning to an alternative state. A key concern is the potential for amplifying or attenuating feedbacks via interactions among successive, linked disturbance events. Following severe wildfires, fuel limitation is a negative feedback that may reduce the likelihood of subsequent fire. However, the duration of, and pre-fire vegetation effects on fuel limitation remain uncertain. To address this knowledge gap, we characterized fuel profiles over a 35-year post-fire chronosequence in California closed-cone [...]

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  • National and Regional Climate Adaptation Science Centers
  • Northwest CASC

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DOI https://www.sciencebase.gov/vocab/category/item/identifier 10.1016/j.foreco.2023.121263

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citationTypeJournal Article
journalForest Ecology and Management
parts
typeVolume
value545
typeDOI
valuehttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.foreco.2023.121263

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