Reprint

Wildland Fire, Forest Dynamics, and Their Interactions

Edited by
July 2018
340 pages
  • ISBN978-3-03897-099-6 (Paperback)
  • ISBN978-3-03897-100-9 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Wildland Fire, Forest Dynamics, and Their Interactions that was published in

Biology & Life Sciences
Environmental & Earth Sciences
Format
  • Paperback
License
© 2019 by the authors; CC BY license
Keywords
bushfire; grassfire; flammability; forest fire; quantitative methods; wildland fire; vegetation dynamics; Greater Hinggan Mountains; boreal forest; fire regime; fire season; ordinal logistic regression; fire; severity; seismic line; disturbance; jack pine; production; vigor; abundance; presence; Ericaceae; velvet leaf blueberry; Vaccinium myrtilloides; burn severity; forest structure; succession; Cascade Range; restoration; mixed-conifer forest; forest recovery; wildfire effects; stem maps; resilient ecosystems; Pike National Forest; Hayman Fire; disturbance; forest management; mountain pine beetle; subalpine ecosystem; Colorado; Rocky Mountains; fire severity; forestry; fuel build-up; restoration; wildfire; fire severity; surface moisture; remote sensing; spatial controls; boreal forest; Great Xing’an Mountains; spruce budworm defoliation; forest fire; disturbance interactions; forest composition; weather; boreal forest; burn severity; disturbance; fire effects; fire history; forest fire; regeneration; species richness; Colorado; USA; delayed tree mortality; Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii (Mirb.) Franco); Hayman Fire; ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa Lawson & C. Lawson); snag; surface cover; Wildfire; Wildland fire; forest fire; boreal forest; fire management; human influence; climate; fire severity; burn severity; wildland fire; forests; fire regime; fire refugia; wildfire; climate change; management; resilience; modeling; southwest; climate change; prescribed burning; vegetation change; climate adaptation; biological legacies; burn severity; disturbance; forest composition and structure; land cover; US Pacific Northwest; pyrogeography; refugia; resilience; wildfire; spruce budworm defoliation; vertical fuel continuity; crown fire; forest fire management; forest structure; natural disturbance; insect outbreak; boreal mixedwood forest; interaction; remote sensing; MODIS; Amazonian forests; Brazilian Forest Code; edge effects