This study examined the effect of fire regime on coarse woody debris (CWD) mass using a combination of field data and modeling. The objectives were to use field sampling to determine how CWD differs between two areas tha ...
Fire suppression in the last several decades has resulted in unprecedented accumulations of organic matter on the landscape, leading to an increase in large, intense wildfires. This study investigated the soil microbial ...
This research assesses prescribed burning as a habitat management
technique in wetlands and associated upland communities of Malheur
National Wildlife Refuge, southeastern Oregon. Experimental burns
were conducted to ...
Fire history and fire regimes were reconstructed for a 450 km² area in the central
western Oregon Cascades, using tree-ring analysis of fire scars and tree origin years at
137 sampled clearcuts. I described temporal pa ...
Fire is the dominant disturbance process in western U.S. forests, and although effects of fire in upland forests are relatively well-studied, there is little information about fire effects on riparian forests, critical a ...
Following high-severity fire, forest succession may take alternate pathways
depending on the pattern of the fire and any secondary disturbances during early stand
development, with lasting consequences for ecosystem fu ...
Teensma, Peter Dominic Adrian, 1956-; Rienstra, John T.; Yeiter, Mark A.; United States. Bureau of Land Management. Oregon State Office.(Portland, Or. : U.S. Dept. of the Interior, Bureau of Land Management, Oregon State Office, 1991)
A crossdated fire history was reconstructed for a 1562 km2 area in the southern
Willamette foothills of Oregon, using fire scars and tree origin years from twelve sites.
The purpose of this study was to determine fire ...
Fire severity is hypothesized as an important driver of bird responses to wildfire. For those species that typically respond negatively to increasing severity, Accessibility of high-severity burned forest may be dependen ...