Fire history of coniferous riparian forests in the Sierra Nevada |
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Authors: | Kip Van de Water Malcolm North |
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Institution: | 1. Department of Plant Sciences, One Shields Ave., University of California, 95616, United States;2. USFS Sierra Nevada Research Center, 1731 Research Park Dr., Davis, CA 95618, United States |
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Abstract: | Fire is an important ecological process in many western U.S. coniferous forests, yet high fuel loads, rural home construction and other factors have encouraged the suppression of most wildfires. Using mechanical thinning and prescribed burning, land managers often try to reduce fuels in strategic areas with the highest fuel loads. Riparian forests, however, are often designated as areas where only limited management action can take place within a fixed-width zone. These highly productive forests have developed heavy fuel loads capable of supporting stand-replacing crown fires that can alter wildlife habitat and ecosystem function, and contribute to stream channel erosion. Objectives of this study were to determine whether adjacent coniferous riparian and upland forests burned historically with different frequencies and seasonalities, and whether these relationships varied by forest, site, and stream characteristics. We measured dendrochronological fire records in adjacent riparian and upland areas across a variety of forest, site and stream conditions at 36 sites in three sampling areas in the northern Sierra Nevada. |
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Keywords: | Dendrochronology Fire frequency Riparian Fire history |
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