Adapting western North American forests to climate change and wildfires: 10 common questions

We review science‐based adaptation strategies for western North American (wNA) forests that include restoring active fire regimes and fostering resilient structure and composition of forested landscapes. As part of the review, we address common questions associated with climate adaptation and realig...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inEcological applications Vol. 31; no. 8; pp. e02433 - n/a
Main Authors Prichard, Susan J., Hessburg, Paul F., Hagmann, R. Keala, Povak, Nicholas A., Dobrowski, Solomon Z., Hurteau, Matthew D., Kane, Van R., Keane, Robert E., Kobziar, Leda N., Kolden, Crystal A., North, Malcolm, Parks, Sean A., Safford, Hugh D., Stevens, Jens T., Yocom, Larissa L., Churchill, Derek J., Gray, Robert W., Huffman, David W., Lake, Frank K., Khatri‐Chhetri, Pratima
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.12.2021
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
Abstract We review science‐based adaptation strategies for western North American (wNA) forests that include restoring active fire regimes and fostering resilient structure and composition of forested landscapes. As part of the review, we address common questions associated with climate adaptation and realignment treatments that run counter to a broad consensus in the literature. These include the following: (1) Are the effects of fire exclusion overstated? If so, are treatments unwarranted and even counterproductive? (2) Is forest thinning alone sufficient to mitigate wildfire hazard? (3) Can forest thinning and prescribed burning solve the problem? (4) Should active forest management, including forest thinning, be concentrated in the wildland urban interface (WUI)? (5) Can wildfires on their own do the work of fuel treatments? (6) Is the primary objective of fuel reduction treatments to assist in future firefighting response and containment? (7) Do fuel treatments work under extreme fire weather? (8) Is the scale of the problem too great? Can we ever catch up? (9) Will planting more trees mitigate climate change in wNA forests? And (10) is post‐fire management needed or even ecologically justified? Based on our review of the scientific evidence, a range of proactive management actions are justified and necessary to keep pace with changing climatic and wildfire regimes and declining forest heterogeneity after severe wildfires. Science‐based adaptation options include the use of managed wildfire, prescribed burning, and coupled mechanical thinning and prescribed burning as is consistent with land management allocations and forest conditions. Although some current models of fire management in wNA are averse to short‐term risks and uncertainties, the long‐term environmental, social, and cultural consequences of wildfire management primarily grounded in fire suppression are well documented, highlighting an urgency to invest in intentional forest management and restoration of active fire regimes.
AbstractList We review science‐based adaptation strategies for western North American (wNA) forests that include restoring active fire regimes and fostering resilient structure and composition of forested landscapes. As part of the review, we address common questions associated with climate adaptation and realignment treatments that run counter to a broad consensus in the literature. These include the following: (1) Are the effects of fire exclusion overstated? If so, are treatments unwarranted and even counterproductive? (2) Is forest thinning alone sufficient to mitigate wildfire hazard? (3) Can forest thinning and prescribed burning solve the problem? (4) Should active forest management, including forest thinning, be concentrated in the wildland urban interface (WUI)? (5) Can wildfires on their own do the work of fuel treatments? (6) Is the primary objective of fuel reduction treatments to assist in future firefighting response and containment? (7) Do fuel treatments work under extreme fire weather? (8) Is the scale of the problem too great? Can we ever catch up? (9) Will planting more trees mitigate climate change in wNA forests? And (10) is post‐fire management needed or even ecologically justified? Based on our review of the scientific evidence, a range of proactive management actions are justified and necessary to keep pace with changing climatic and wildfire regimes and declining forest heterogeneity after severe wildfires. Science‐based adaptation options include the use of managed wildfire, prescribed burning, and coupled mechanical thinning and prescribed burning as is consistent with land management allocations and forest conditions. Although some current models of fire management in wNA are averse to short‐term risks and uncertainties, the long‐term environmental, social, and cultural consequences of wildfire management primarily grounded in fire suppression are well documented, highlighting an urgency to invest in intentional forest management and restoration of active fire regimes.
Author Huffman, David W.
Hessburg, Paul F.
Kobziar, Leda N.
Gray, Robert W.
Parks, Sean A.
Yocom, Larissa L.
Kolden, Crystal A.
Prichard, Susan J.
Keane, Robert E.
North, Malcolm
Stevens, Jens T.
Hurteau, Matthew D.
Safford, Hugh D.
Churchill, Derek J.
Khatri‐Chhetri, Pratima
Hagmann, R. Keala
Lake, Frank K.
Dobrowski, Solomon Z.
Kane, Van R.
Povak, Nicholas A.
Author_xml – sequence: 1
  givenname: Susan J.
  orcidid: 0000-0002-6001-1487
  surname: Prichard
  fullname: Prichard, Susan J.
  email: sprich@uw.eu
  organization: University of Washington School of Environmental and Forest Sciences
– sequence: 2
  givenname: Paul F.
  orcidid: 0000-0002-0330-7230
  surname: Hessburg
  fullname: Hessburg, Paul F.
  organization: U.S. Forest Service PNW Research Station
– sequence: 3
  givenname: R. Keala
  orcidid: 0000-0002-1952-7449
  surname: Hagmann
  fullname: Hagmann, R. Keala
  organization: Applegate Forestry LLC
– sequence: 4
  givenname: Nicholas A.
  orcidid: 0000-0003-1220-7095
  surname: Povak
  fullname: Povak, Nicholas A.
  organization: Institute of Forest Genetics
– sequence: 5
  givenname: Solomon Z.
  orcidid: 0000-0003-2561-3850
  surname: Dobrowski
  fullname: Dobrowski, Solomon Z.
  organization: University of Montana College of Forestry and Conservation
– sequence: 6
  givenname: Matthew D.
  orcidid: 0000-0001-8457-8974
  surname: Hurteau
  fullname: Hurteau, Matthew D.
  organization: University of New Mexico Biology Department
– sequence: 7
  givenname: Van R.
  orcidid: 0000-0002-0792-4850
  surname: Kane
  fullname: Kane, Van R.
  organization: University of Washington School of Environmental and Forest Sciences
– sequence: 8
  givenname: Robert E.
  surname: Keane
  fullname: Keane, Robert E.
  organization: Missoula Fire Sciences Laboratory
– sequence: 9
  givenname: Leda N.
  orcidid: 0000-0002-5882-8498
  surname: Kobziar
  fullname: Kobziar, Leda N.
  organization: University of Idaho
– sequence: 10
  givenname: Crystal A.
  orcidid: 0000-0001-7093-4552
  surname: Kolden
  fullname: Kolden, Crystal A.
  organization: University of California Merced
– sequence: 11
  givenname: Malcolm
  orcidid: 0000-0002-9090-784X
  surname: North
  fullname: North, Malcolm
  organization: U.S. Forest Service Pacific Southwest Research Station
– sequence: 12
  givenname: Sean A.
  orcidid: 0000-0002-2982-5255
  surname: Parks
  fullname: Parks, Sean A.
  organization: U.S. Forest Service Aldo Leopold Wilderness Research Institute
– sequence: 13
  givenname: Hugh D.
  surname: Safford
  fullname: Safford, Hugh D.
  organization: U.S. Forest Service Pacific Southwest Research Station
– sequence: 14
  givenname: Jens T.
  orcidid: 0000-0002-2234-1960
  surname: Stevens
  fullname: Stevens, Jens T.
  organization: New Mexico Landscapes Field Station
– sequence: 15
  givenname: Larissa L.
  orcidid: 0000-0003-2459-0765
  surname: Yocom
  fullname: Yocom, Larissa L.
  organization: Utah State University College of Agriculture and Applied Sciences
– sequence: 16
  givenname: Derek J.
  orcidid: 0000-0002-3562-8194
  surname: Churchill
  fullname: Churchill, Derek J.
  organization: Washington State Department of Natural Resources Forest Health Program
– sequence: 17
  givenname: Robert W.
  surname: Gray
  fullname: Gray, Robert W.
  organization: R.W. Gray Consulting
– sequence: 18
  givenname: David W.
  orcidid: 0000-0001-6547-7107
  surname: Huffman
  fullname: Huffman, David W.
  organization: Northern Arizona University Ecological Restoration Institute
– sequence: 19
  givenname: Frank K.
  surname: Lake
  fullname: Lake, Frank K.
  organization: U.S. Forest Service Pacific Southwest Research Station
– sequence: 20
  givenname: Pratima
  orcidid: 0000-0003-4689-2027
  surname: Khatri‐Chhetri
  fullname: Khatri‐Chhetri, Pratima
  organization: University of Washington School of Environmental and Forest Sciences
BackLink https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34339088$$D View this record in MEDLINE/PubMed
BookMark eNo9UNtKAzEQDVKxFwW_QPIDWyfJpk18W4o3KOqDvglLmkzalW6y7m4p_XtTqs7DnIFzZjhzxmQQYkBCrhlMGQC_RdNMeS7EGRkxLXQmpeKDNINkGcxnbEjGXfcFqTjnF2QoklaDUiPyWTjT9FVY0z12PbaBvsS239CixrayJlAf20R0tI_Ubqva9EjtxoQ1UhMc3Vdb56ukuKMMqI11HQP93qWNKobukpx7s-3w6hcn5OPh_n3xlC1fH58XxTKzuRYic55zBIkWtZkJt4LUufY5aM1Ai0Ss_ExxYznLmZICnZDOz6VQc3DKMjEhN6e7zW5VoyubNhltD-Xfm0mQnQTJLx7-eQblMb4yxVce4yvvi7cjih8_oGNl
CitedBy_id crossref_primary_10_1002_rse2_420
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_foreco_2022_120270
crossref_primary_10_1186_s42408_023_00197_0
crossref_primary_10_1186_s42408_024_00342_3
crossref_primary_10_3389_ffgc_2022_805179
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_earscirev_2023_104569
crossref_primary_10_3389_ffgc_2022_962816
crossref_primary_10_1093_pnasnexus_pgad005
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_ecolecon_2024_108244
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_foreco_2021_119678
crossref_primary_10_1111_rec_13766
crossref_primary_10_1111_risa_17680
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_ijdrr_2025_105270
crossref_primary_10_1073_pnas_2208120120
crossref_primary_10_1002_ecs2_4875
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_foreco_2022_120385
crossref_primary_10_1186_s42408_024_00271_1
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_rse_2024_114310
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_foreco_2022_120381
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_foreco_2023_121232
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_foreco_2023_121351
crossref_primary_10_1007_s11356_022_23961_2
crossref_primary_10_1139_cjfr_2024_0092
crossref_primary_10_1002_ecs2_4735
crossref_primary_10_3389_frwa_2023_1115264
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_inffus_2024_102369
crossref_primary_10_1186_s42408_024_00249_z
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_jenvman_2025_124535
crossref_primary_10_1029_2023JG007722
crossref_primary_10_1186_s42408_022_00163_2
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_scitotenv_2023_162836
crossref_primary_10_1002_ecs2_4184
crossref_primary_10_1007_s11104_022_05315_6
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_foreco_2022_120258
crossref_primary_10_3390_su16083270
crossref_primary_10_1080_00049158_2024_2381846
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_foreco_2023_121246
crossref_primary_10_1186_s42408_024_00331_6
crossref_primary_10_3390_fire6040146
crossref_primary_10_1002_ecs2_4865
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_jenvman_2024_123672
crossref_primary_10_1111_rec_14181
crossref_primary_10_1186_s42408_024_00316_5
crossref_primary_10_3390_fire5020053
crossref_primary_10_1186_s42408_023_00194_3
crossref_primary_10_1002_jwmg_22309
crossref_primary_10_1186_s42408_024_00345_0
crossref_primary_10_1007_s10980_022_01506_9
crossref_primary_10_1088_1748_9326_ace91f
crossref_primary_10_3389_ffgc_2022_829125
crossref_primary_10_1088_1748_9326_acf05a
crossref_primary_10_1002_jwmg_22388
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_foreco_2021_119975
crossref_primary_10_1111_rec_13863
crossref_primary_10_1186_s42408_024_00297_5
crossref_primary_10_1007_s10531_024_02978_8
crossref_primary_10_1029_2020RG000726
crossref_primary_10_3390_land11070995
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_foreco_2022_120524
crossref_primary_10_1038_s43247_021_00299_0
crossref_primary_10_1038_s41598_024_56104_3
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_agrformet_2024_110268
crossref_primary_10_1038_s43247_024_01893_8
crossref_primary_10_1071_WF23093
crossref_primary_10_1111_csp2_12935
crossref_primary_10_3390_fire5050131
crossref_primary_10_1038_s41558_023_01881_4
crossref_primary_10_1186_s42408_023_00204_4
crossref_primary_10_3390_cli10040058
crossref_primary_10_1007_s40725_023_00189_y
crossref_primary_10_1002_jwmg_22410
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_foreco_2021_119872
crossref_primary_10_1038_s41467_024_46702_0
crossref_primary_10_3389_ffgc_2023_1250038
crossref_primary_10_1186_s42408_024_00282_y
crossref_primary_10_1038_s43247_023_00993_1
crossref_primary_10_3390_fire8030109
crossref_primary_10_3390_fire7030077
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_biocon_2022_109499
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_foreco_2022_120110
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_foreco_2024_121885
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_jenvman_2024_121397
crossref_primary_10_3390_su162310157
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_foreco_2024_122171
crossref_primary_10_1186_s42408_023_00167_6
crossref_primary_10_3390_fire6100398
crossref_primary_10_3390_rs14205115
crossref_primary_10_3390_su151511549
crossref_primary_10_1002_eco_2642
crossref_primary_10_1002_eap_2432
crossref_primary_10_1002_eap_2431
crossref_primary_10_1002_fee_2408
crossref_primary_10_1186_s42408_023_00233_z
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_scitotenv_2024_177863
crossref_primary_10_3390_f15091667
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_biocon_2025_111071
crossref_primary_10_3389_ffgc_2024_1286937
crossref_primary_10_1007_s10530_022_02951_y
crossref_primary_10_1126_science_adu5463
crossref_primary_10_1002_ecs2_70073
crossref_primary_10_1038_s43247_024_01686_z
crossref_primary_10_1186_s42408_022_00159_y
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_foreco_2022_120103
crossref_primary_10_1186_s42408_022_00139_2
crossref_primary_10_3390_fire4030062
crossref_primary_10_1088_2752_5309_acdbe3
crossref_primary_10_1007_s13280_021_01629_4
crossref_primary_10_3390_fire5040088
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_ijdrr_2023_103849
crossref_primary_10_1093_ornithapp_duad065
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_foreco_2023_121430
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_crsus_2024_100125
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_foreco_2024_122388
crossref_primary_10_1186_s42408_023_00244_w
crossref_primary_10_1002_eap_2940
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_jenvman_2023_118270
crossref_primary_10_1071_WF22107
crossref_primary_10_1007_s10113_024_02249_w
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_foreco_2021_119764
crossref_primary_10_1093_treephys_tpad051
crossref_primary_10_3389_fonc_2023_1164535
crossref_primary_10_1029_2022GB007429
crossref_primary_10_1029_2024JG008627
crossref_primary_10_3390_w15193486
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_foreco_2021_119924
crossref_primary_10_1038_d41586_024_03549_1
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_foreco_2023_121443
crossref_primary_10_1002_ecs2_70083
crossref_primary_10_1002_eap_3075
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_tfp_2023_100464
crossref_primary_10_1071_WF23036
crossref_primary_10_3389_ffgc_2023_1286980
crossref_primary_10_1038_s43247_023_00954_8
crossref_primary_10_3390_fire6110428
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_jenvman_2023_119157
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_biombioe_2024_107364
crossref_primary_10_1088_1748_9326_adab86
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_jenvman_2024_122325
crossref_primary_10_1071_WF23162
crossref_primary_10_1002_eap_2973
crossref_primary_10_1071_WF24096
crossref_primary_10_1002_eap_2972
crossref_primary_10_1002_eap_2736
crossref_primary_10_1186_s42408_022_00131_w
crossref_primary_10_1007_s40572_022_00355_7
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_foreco_2022_120607
crossref_primary_10_3390_fire4040097
crossref_primary_10_1038_s43247_023_00977_1
crossref_primary_10_1093_jofore_fvae012
crossref_primary_10_1186_s42408_022_00157_0
crossref_primary_10_3389_ffgc_2023_1146033
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_foreco_2021_120004
crossref_primary_10_1111_gcb_70052
crossref_primary_10_1139_cjfr_2022_0054
crossref_primary_10_1007_s10113_022_01950_y
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_foreco_2023_121011
crossref_primary_10_1103_PRXEnergy_4_017001
crossref_primary_10_1186_s42408_024_00324_5
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_foreco_2023_121372
crossref_primary_10_1111_risa_14113
crossref_primary_10_1109_JSTARS_2022_3175452
crossref_primary_10_3389_ffgc_2024_1402124
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_oneear_2024_05_002
crossref_primary_10_1029_2023EF003763
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_foreco_2025_122549
crossref_primary_10_1002_eap_2725
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_landurbplan_2023_104957
crossref_primary_10_1002_eap_70003
crossref_primary_10_1186_s42408_022_00149_0
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_foreco_2021_119796
crossref_primary_10_3390_fire6070276
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_foreco_2021_119674
crossref_primary_10_1371_journal_pclm_0000158
crossref_primary_10_1186_s42408_024_00264_0
crossref_primary_10_3389_ffgc_2023_1269081
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_foreco_2023_121145
ContentType Journal Article
Copyright 2021 The Authors. published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Ecological Society of America. This article has been contributed to by US Government employees and their work is in the public domain in the USA.
2021 The Authors. Ecological Applications published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Ecological Society of America. This article has been contributed to by US Government employees and their work is in the public domain in the USA.
Copyright_xml – notice: 2021 The Authors. published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Ecological Society of America. This article has been contributed to by US Government employees and their work is in the public domain in the USA.
– notice: 2021 The Authors. Ecological Applications published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Ecological Society of America. This article has been contributed to by US Government employees and their work is in the public domain in the USA.
DBID 24P
CGR
CUY
CVF
ECM
EIF
NPM
DOI 10.1002/eap.2433
DatabaseName Wiley Online Library Open Access
Medline
MEDLINE
MEDLINE (Ovid)
MEDLINE
MEDLINE
PubMed
DatabaseTitle MEDLINE
Medline Complete
MEDLINE with Full Text
PubMed
MEDLINE (Ovid)
DatabaseTitleList
MEDLINE
Database_xml – sequence: 1
  dbid: 24P
  name: Wiley Online Library Open Access
  url: https://authorservices.wiley.com/open-science/open-access/browse-journals.html
  sourceTypes: Publisher
– sequence: 2
  dbid: NPM
  name: PubMed
  url: https://proxy.k.utb.cz/login?url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?db=PubMed
  sourceTypes: Index Database
– sequence: 3
  dbid: EIF
  name: MEDLINE
  url: https://proxy.k.utb.cz/login?url=https://www.webofscience.com/wos/medline/basic-search
  sourceTypes: Index Database
DeliveryMethod fulltext_linktorsrc
Discipline Biology
Ecology
Environmental Sciences
EISSN 1939-5582
EndPage n/a
ExternalDocumentID 34339088
EAP2433
Genre article
Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S
Review
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Journal Article
GeographicLocations North America
GeographicLocations_xml – name: North America
GrantInformation_xml – fundername: Washington Department of Natural Resources
– fundername: Conservation Northwest
– fundername: The Nature Conservancy Oregon
– fundername: Ecological Restoration Institute
– fundername: USDA Forest Service Pacific Northwest Research Station
– fundername: California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection
– fundername: The Wilderness Society
– fundername: NSF’s Growing Convergence Research Program
  funderid: 2019762
– fundername: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
GroupedDBID ---
-ET
-~X
.-4
..I
0R~
1OB
1OC
24P
29G
2AX
33P
4.4
42X
53G
5GY
85S
8WZ
A6W
AAESR
AAHBH
AAHHS
AAHKG
AAHQN
AAIHA
AAIKC
AAISJ
AAKGQ
AAMNL
AAMNW
AANLZ
AASGY
AAXRX
AAYCA
AAYJJ
AAZKR
ABBHK
ABCUV
ABEFU
ABJNI
ABLJU
ABPFR
ABPLY
ABPPZ
ABPQH
ABTLG
ABXSQ
ABYAD
ACAHQ
ACCFJ
ACCZN
ACGFS
ACHIC
ACNCT
ACPOU
ACSTJ
ACTWD
ACUBG
ACXBN
ACXQS
ADBBV
ADKYN
ADMGS
ADNWM
ADOZA
ADULT
ADXAS
ADZMN
ADZOD
AEEZP
AEIGN
AENEX
AEQDE
AEUPB
AEUQT
AEUYR
AFAZZ
AFBPY
AFFPM
AFGKR
AFWVQ
AFXHP
AFZJQ
AHBTC
AHXOZ
AI.
AIDAL
AILXY
AITYG
AIURR
AIWBW
AJBDE
ALMA_UNASSIGNED_HOLDINGS
ALUQN
ALVPJ
AMYDB
ANHSF
AQVQM
AS~
AZFZN
AZVAB
BFHJK
BMXJE
BRXPI
CBGCD
CS3
CUYZI
DCZOG
DDYGU
DEVKO
DOOOF
DRFUL
DRSTM
DU5
EBS
ECGQY
EJD
EQZMY
F5P
FVMVE
GTFYD
HGD
HGLYW
HQ2
HTVGU
HVGLF
H~9
IAG
IAO
IEA
IEP
IGH
IOF
IPSME
ITC
JAAYA
JAS
JBMMH
JBS
JBZCM
JEB
JENOY
JHFFW
JKQEH
JLEZI
JLS
JLXEF
JPL
JPM
JSODD
JST
L7B
LATKE
LEEKS
LITHE
LOXES
LUTES
LYRES
MEWTI
MV1
MVM
MXFUL
MXSTM
NHB
NXSMM
O9-
P0-
P2P
P2W
PALCI
RJQFR
ROL
RSZ
SA0
SAMSI
SUPJJ
TN5
UKR
V62
VH1
VOH
VQA
WBKPD
WH7
WOHZO
WXSBR
XIH
XSW
Y6R
YV5
YXE
YYM
YYP
Z0I
ZCA
ZCG
ZO4
ZZTAW
~02
~KM
CGR
CUY
CVF
ECM
EIF
NPM
ID FETCH-LOGICAL-c4933-df22e05ece9a63db0a6329f409910935ecbf682ac2141853ed35df753870d8c13
IEDL.DBID 24P
ISSN 1051-0761
IngestDate Wed Feb 19 02:27:40 EST 2025
Wed Jan 22 16:26:55 EST 2025
IsDoiOpenAccess true
IsOpenAccess true
IsPeerReviewed true
IsScholarly true
Issue 8
Keywords mechanical thinning
prescribed fire
wildland fire
adaptive management
forest management
Climate Change and Western Wildfires
cultural burning
carbon
ecological resilience
managed wildfire
fuel treatments
restoration
climate change
Language English
License Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs
2021 The Authors. Ecological Applications published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Ecological Society of America. This article has been contributed to by US Government employees and their work is in the public domain in the USA.
LinkModel DirectLink
MergedId FETCHMERGED-LOGICAL-c4933-df22e05ece9a63db0a6329f409910935ecbf682ac2141853ed35df753870d8c13
Notes Corresponding Editor: David S. Schimel.
ORCID 0000-0003-1220-7095
0000-0001-8457-8974
0000-0003-4689-2027
0000-0002-0330-7230
0000-0002-2982-5255
0000-0003-2459-0765
0000-0001-7093-4552
0000-0002-1952-7449
0000-0002-6001-1487
0000-0002-5882-8498
0000-0002-0792-4850
0000-0002-9090-784X
0000-0002-3562-8194
0000-0003-2561-3850
0000-0002-2234-1960
0000-0001-6547-7107
OpenAccessLink https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002%2Feap.2433
PMID 34339088
PageCount 30
ParticipantIDs pubmed_primary_34339088
wiley_primary_10_1002_eap_2433_EAP2433
PublicationCentury 2000
PublicationDate December 2021
PublicationDateYYYYMMDD 2021-12-01
PublicationDate_xml – month: 12
  year: 2021
  text: December 2021
PublicationDecade 2020
PublicationPlace United States
PublicationPlace_xml – name: United States
PublicationTitle Ecological applications
PublicationTitleAlternate Ecol Appl
PublicationYear 2021
References 2015b; 6
2019; 10
2019; 15
2020; 16
2017; 391
2020; 15
2008; 106
2020; 11
2017; 396
2021; 71
2001; 47
1997; 9
2012; 10
2020; 18
2019; 25
2019; 28
2010; 5
2012; 21
2010; 6
2016; 46
2014; 314
2011; 2
2014; 318
2020; 35
2016; 14
2011; 7
2016; 13
2016; 12
2007; 16
2004; 54
2016; 7
2009; 79
2018; 359
2015; 358
2020; 30
2015; 113
2015; 353
2019; 48
2018; 115
2020; 26
2020; 23
2008; 256
2011; 262
2008; 255
2011; 261
2016; 26
2017; 389
2016; 25
1973; 3
2020; 29
2013; 22
2017; 47
2020; 368
2021; 480
2008; 6
2018; 408
2008; 72
2008; 1
2017; 114
2017; 115
2010; 60
2013; 18
2017; 31
2020; 5
2020; 3
2020; 1
2013; 11
2001
2020; 9
2021; 118
2016; 113
2013; 310
2020; 47
2016; 114
2001; 11
2014; 9
2019a; 15
2016b; 7
2018; 75
2015; 2
2007; 246
2014; 515
2017; 20
2021; 4
2015; 5
2017; 26
2011
2013; 43
2017; 27
2013; 303
2015; 96
2018; 422
2016; 366
2009
2016; 365
2007
2018; 429
2003
2018; 68
2020; 470
2010; 259
2021
2020
2020; 472
2019b; 28
2020; 70
2017; 13
2019
2016; 375
2018
2008; 89
2017
2009; 7
2015
2014
2020; 66
2013
2007; 44
1996; 43
2016; 371
2002; 17
2007; 104
2013; 4
2010; 108
2010; 19
2005; 211
2015a; 25
2002; 155
2006; 36
2005; 215
2002; 11
2019; 445
2014; 24
2019; 449
2016; 147
2016; 380
2009; 118
2014; 23
2019; 441
2013; 9
2009; 12
2018; 6
2018; 9
2010; 20
2006; 24
2000; 127
2005; 103
2019; 432
1985
2007; 3
2019; 437
2014; 17
2009; 19
2018; 33
2016a; 114
2009; 18
2019; 7
2019; 9
2018; 28
2019; 2
2011; 81
1996
2014; 151
1991
2018; 23
2018; 27
1995; 6
2010; 40
2014; 44
2012; 109
2018; 24
2012b; 274
2012; 110
2010; 47
2013a; 23
2011; 92
2013b; 5
2007; 80
2019; 454
2013; 291
2018; 16
2003; 21
2018; 14
2019; 450
2009; 106
2017; 7
2017; 8
2015a; 113
2015; 30
1995; 76
2013; 287
2019; 124
2019; 366
2015; 349
2014; 330
2011; 19
2019; 365
2017; 406
2014; 328
2015b; 349
2011; 20
2019; 116
2012a
2015; 338
2017; 404
2012; 62
2012; 264
2012; 267
2015; 11
2006; 9
2008; 10
2014; 111
2012; 269
2009; 258
2009; 259
2015; 309–310
2015; 24
1994; 9
2015; 25
2012; 276
2004; 18
2011; 41
2012; 7
2012; 8
2009; 39
2016; 66
References_xml – volume: 21
  start-page: 357
  year: 2012
  end-page: 367
  article-title: Estimation of wildfire size and risk changes due to fuels treatments
  publication-title: International Journal of Wildland Fire
– volume: 7
  start-page: 239
  year: 2019
  article-title: Climate, environment, and disturbance history govern resilience of western North American forests
  publication-title: Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution
– volume: 23
  start-page: 215
  year: 2014
  end-page: 223
  article-title: Mapping day‐of‐burning with coarse‐resolution satellite fire‐detection data
  publication-title: International Journal of Wildland Fire
– volume: 7
  start-page: 275
  year: 2019
  article-title: Scaling ecological resilience
  publication-title: Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution
– start-page: 96
  year: 2003
  end-page: 126
– volume: 391
  start-page: 164
  year: 2017
  end-page: 175
  article-title: Landscape‐scale quantification of fire‐induced change in canopy cover following mountain pine beetle outbreak and timber harvest
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 318
  start-page: 122
  year: 2014
  end-page: 132
  article-title: Fuel treatment prescriptions alter spatial patterns of fire severity around the wildland–urban interface during the Wallow Fire, Arizona, USA
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 15
  start-page: 43
  year: 2019a
  article-title: Fuel dynamics and reburn severity following high‐severity fire in a Sierra Nevada, USA, mixed‐conifer forest
  publication-title: Fire Ecology
– volume: 11
  start-page: 508
  year: 2020
  article-title: Effectiveness of restoration treatments for reducing fuels and increasing understory diversity in shrubby mixed‐conifer forests of the southern Rocky Mountains, USA
  publication-title: Forests
– volume: 13
  start-page: 13684
  year: 2016
  end-page: 13689
  article-title: Socio‐ecological transitions trigger fire regime shifts and modulate fire‐climate interactions in the Sierra Nevada, CA, 1600–2015 CE
  publication-title: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA
– volume: 26
  start-page: 930
  year: 2017
  end-page: 943
  article-title: Multidecadal trends in area burned with high severity in the Selway‐Bitterroot Wilderness Area 1880–2012
  publication-title: International Journal of Wildland Fire
– volume: 17
  start-page: 29
  year: 2014
  end-page: 42
  article-title: Previous fires moderate burn severity of subsequent wildland fires in two large western US wilderness areas
  publication-title: Ecosystems
– volume: 10
  year: 2019
  article-title: Living on the edge: trailing edge forests at risk of fire‐facilitated conversion to nonforest
  publication-title: Ecosphere
– volume: 43
  start-page: 570
  year: 2013
  end-page: 583
  article-title: Double whammy: high‐severity fire and drought in ponderosa pine forests of the Southwest
  publication-title: Canadian Journal of Forest Research
– volume: 262
  start-page: 215
  year: 2011
  end-page: 228
  article-title: Stand structure, fuel loads, and fire behavior in riparian and upland forests, Sierra Nevada Mountains, USA: a comparison of current and reconstructed conditions
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 470
  year: 2020
  article-title: Effects of post‐fire management on dead woody fuel dynamics and stand structure in a severely burned mixed‐conifer forest, in northeastern Washington State, USA
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 19
  start-page: 364
  year: 2010
  end-page: 373
  article-title: Beyond wildfire: perspectives of climate, managed fire and policy in the USA
  publication-title: International Journal of Wildland Fire
– volume: 108
  start-page: 24
  year: 2010
  end-page: 31
  article-title: Challenges and approaches in planning fuel treatments across fire‐excluded forested landscapes
  publication-title: Journal of Forestry
– volume: 40
  start-page: 1615
  year: 2010
  end-page: 1626
  article-title: Fuel treatments reduce the severity of wildfire effects in dry mixed conifer forest, Washington, USA
  publication-title: Canadian Journal of Forest Research
– volume: 2
  start-page: 9
  year: 2015
  article-title: Negative consequences of positive feedbacks in US wildfire management
  publication-title: Forest Ecosystems
– year: 2014
– volume: 70
  start-page: 659
  year: 2020
  end-page: 673
  article-title: Wildfire‐driven forest conversion in western North American landscapes
  publication-title: BioScience
– volume: 472
  start-page: 118220
  year: 2020
  article-title: Topographic variation in tree group and gap structure in Sierra Nevada mixed‐conifer forests with active fire regimes
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 28
  start-page: 495
  year: 2019b
  end-page: 511
  article-title: Implementation constraints limit benefits of restoration treatments in mixed‐conifer forests
  publication-title: International Journal of Wildland Fire
– volume: 11
  start-page: 15
  year: 2013
  end-page: 24
  article-title: Prescribed fire in North American forests and woodlands: history, current practice, and challenges
  publication-title: Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment
– volume: 259
  start-page: 1556
  year: 2010
  end-page: 1570
  article-title: A comparison of landscape fuel treatment strategies to mitigate wildland fire risk in the urban interface and preserve old forest structure
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 309–310
  start-page: 33
  year: 2015
  end-page: 47
  article-title: Representing climate, disturbance, and vegetation interactions in landscape models
  publication-title: Ecological Modelling
– volume: 259
  start-page: 660
  year: 2010
  end-page: 684
  article-title: A global overview of drought and heat‐induced tree mortality reveals emerging climate change risks for forests
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 118
  start-page: 1373
  year: 2009
  end-page: 1382
  article-title: Negative native‐exotic diversity relationship in oak savannas explained by human influence and climate
  publication-title: Oikos
– volume: 445
  start-page: 1
  year: 2019
  end-page: 12
  article-title: Historical and current fire regimes in ponderosa pine forests at Zion National Park, Utah: restoration of pattern and process after a century of fire exclusion
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 8
  year: 2017
  article-title: Climate drives fire synchrony but local factors control fire regime change in northern Mexico
  publication-title: Ecosphere
– volume: 109
  start-page: 535
  year: 2012
  end-page: 543
  article-title: Long‐term perspective on wildfires in the western USA
  publication-title: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA
– volume: 9
  start-page: 259
  year: 1997
  end-page: 274
  article-title: Assessing effects of mitigation strategies for global climate change with an intertemporal model of the U.S. forest and agriculture sectors
  publication-title: Environmental and Resource Economics
– volume: 9
  year: 2018
  article-title: Wildfires managed for restoration enhance ecological resilience
  publication-title: Ecosphere
– volume: 276
  start-page: 174
  year: 2012
  end-page: 184
  article-title: Pattern and process of prescribed fires influence effectiveness at reducing wildfire severity in dry coniferous forests
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– year: 2019
– volume: 12
  start-page: 114
  year: 2009
  end-page: 128
  article-title: Interactions among wildland fires in a long‐established Sierra Nevada natural fire area
  publication-title: Ecosystems
– volume: 39
  start-page: 823
  year: 2009
  end-page: 838
  article-title: Conifer regeneration in stand‐replacement portions of a large mixed‐severity wildfire in the Klamath‐Siskiyou Mountains
  publication-title: Canadian Journal of Forest Research
– volume: 24
  start-page: 1670
  year: 2014
  end-page: 1688
  article-title: Mixed‐conifer forests of central Oregon: effects of logging and fire exclusion vary with environment
  publication-title: Ecological Applications
– volume: 66
  start-page: 130
  year: 2016
  end-page: 146
  article-title: The science of firescapes: achieving fire‐resilient communities
  publication-title: BioScience
– volume: 18
  start-page: 937
  year: 2004
  end-page: 946
  article-title: Impacts of fire‐suppression activities on natural communities
  publication-title: Conservation Biology
– volume: 11
  year: 2020
  article-title: Fine‐scale fire patterns mediate forest structure in frequent‐fire ecosystems
  publication-title: Ecosphere
– volume: 8
  year: 2017
  article-title: Restoring surface fire stabilizes forest carbon under extreme fire weather in the Sierra Nevada
  publication-title: Ecosphere
– volume: 71
  start-page: 85
  year: 2021
  end-page: 101
  article-title: Forest restoration and fuels reduction: convergent or divergent?
  publication-title: BioScience
– volume: 68
  start-page: 944
  year: 2018
  end-page: 954
  article-title: Fire refugia: what are they, and why do they matter for global change?
  publication-title: BioScience
– volume: 310
  start-page: 903
  year: 2013
  end-page: 914
  article-title: Long‐term overstory and understory change following logging and fire exclusion in a Sierra Nevada mixed‐conifer forest
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 15
  start-page: 1
  year: 2020
  article-title: Wildfire management in Mediterranean‐type regions: paradigm change needed
  publication-title: Environmental Research Letters
– year: 2007
– volume: 264
  start-page: 51
  year: 2012
  end-page: 59
  article-title: Microclimate effects of fuels‐reduction and group‐selection silviculture: Implications for fire behavior in Sierran mixed‐conifer forests
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 21
  start-page: 428
  year: 2012
  end-page: 435
  article-title: Seasonal variation in surface fuel moisture between unthinned and thinned mixed conifer forest, northern California, USA
  publication-title: International Journal of Wildland Fire
– volume: 47
  start-page: 957
  year: 2017
  end-page: 964
  article-title: Fuel accumulation in a high‐frequency boreal wildfire regime: from wetland to upland
  publication-title: Canadian Journal of Forest Research
– volume: 330
  start-page: 158
  year: 2014
  end-page: 170
  article-title: Historical conditions in mixed‐conifer forests on the eastern slopes of the northern Oregon Cascade Range, USA
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 15
  start-page: 15
  year: 2019
  article-title: Tree regeneration following wildfires in the western US: a review
  publication-title: Fire Ecology
– volume: 9
  start-page: 18796
  year: 2019
  article-title: Short‐interval wildfire and drought overwhelm boreal forest resilience
  publication-title: Scientific Reports
– volume: 66
  start-page: 578
  year: 2020
  end-page: 588
  article-title: Evaluating restoration treatment effectiveness through a comparison of residual composition, structure, and spatial pattern with historical reference sites
  publication-title: Forest Science
– volume: 28
  start-page: 291
  year: 2018
  end-page: 308
  article-title: Cumulative effects of wildfires on forest dynamics in the eastern Cascade Mountains, USA
  publication-title: Ecological Applications
– volume: 7
  start-page: 237
  year: 2016b
  article-title: Beyond fuel treatment effectiveness: characterizing interactions between fire and treatments in the US
  publication-title: Forests
– volume: 35
  start-page: 293
  year: 2020
  end-page: 318
  article-title: Multi‐scaled drivers of severity patterns vary across land ownerships for the 2013 Rim Fire, California
  publication-title: Landscape Ecology
– volume: 8
  start-page: 82
  year: 2012
  end-page: 106
  article-title: Characterizing fire‐on‐fire interactions in three large wilderness areas
  publication-title: Fire Ecology
– volume: 21
  start-page: 278
  year: 2003
  end-page: 283
  article-title: Restoring ethnographic landscapes and natural elements in Redwood National Park
  publication-title: Ecological Restoration
– volume: 269
  start-page: 68
  year: 2012
  end-page: 81
  article-title: Do thinning and/or burning treatments in western USA ponderosa or Jeffrey pine‐dominated forests help restore natural fire behavior?
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 29
  start-page: 944
  year: 2020
  end-page: 955
  article-title: Biogeography of fire regimes in western U.S. conifer forests: A trait‐based approach
  publication-title: Global Ecology and Biogeography
– volume: 92
  start-page: 1339
  year: 2011
  end-page: 1345
  article-title: Adaptive management for a turbulent future
  publication-title: Journal of Environmental Management
– volume: 396
  start-page: 217
  year: 2017
  end-page: 233
  article-title: Tamm Review: Shifting global fire regimes: Lessons from reburns and research needs
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 43
  start-page: 28
  year: 1996
  end-page: 45
  article-title: Invasion of northern oak woodlands by (Mirb.) Franco in the Sonoma Mountains of California
  publication-title: Madroño
– volume: 28
  start-page: 1730
  year: 2018
  end-page: 1739
  article-title: Pre‐fire drought and competition mediate post‐fire conifer mortality in western U.S. National Parks
  publication-title: Ecological Applications
– volume: 124
  start-page: 3075
  year: 2019
  end-page: 3087
  article-title: Optimizing forest management stabilizes carbon under projected climate and wildfires
  publication-title: Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences
– volume: 11
  year: 2020
  article-title: Potential wildfire and carbon stability in frequent‐fire forests in the Sierra Nevada: trade‐offs from a long‐term study
  publication-title: Ecosphere
– volume: 9
  start-page: 167
  year: 2019
  end-page: 190
  article-title: Enhancing Indigenous food sovereignty: A five‐year collaborative tribal‐university research and extension project in California and Oregon
  publication-title: Journal of Agriculture, Food Systems, and Community Development.
– volume: 359
  start-page: 1001
  year: 2018
  end-page: 1002
  article-title: Rethinking wildfires and forest watersheds
  publication-title: Science
– volume: 26
  start-page: 686
  year: 2016
  end-page: 699
  article-title: Post‐fire vegetation and fuel development influences fire severity patterns in reburns
  publication-title: Ecological Applications
– volume: 16
  start-page: 18
  year: 2020
  article-title: Restoration applications of resource objective wildfires in western US forests: a status of knowledge review
  publication-title: Fire Ecology
– volume: 21
  start-page: 313
  year: 2012
  end-page: 327
  article-title: Spatial variability in wildfire probability across the western United States
  publication-title: International Journal of Wildland Fire
– volume: 9
  year: 2018
  article-title: Fire regimes approaching historic norms reduce wildfire‐facilitated conversion from forest to nonforest
  publication-title: Ecosphere
– volume: 22
  start-page: 1118
  year: 2013
  article-title: Optimising fuel treatments over time and space
  publication-title: International Journal of Wildland Fire
– volume: 7
  start-page: 11
  year: 2012
  end-page: 31
  article-title: Factors associated with the severity of intersecting fires in Yosemite National Park, California, USA
  publication-title: Fire Ecology
– volume: 5
  year: 2010
  article-title: Operational approaches to managing forests of the future in Mediterranean regions within a context of changing climates
  publication-title: Environmental Research Letters
– year: 2013
– year: 1985
– year: 2009
– volume: 7
  start-page: 1
  year: 2016
  end-page: 19
  article-title: U.S. federal fire and forest policy: emphasizing resilience in dry forests
  publication-title: Ecosphere
– volume: 375
  start-page: 84
  year: 2016
  end-page: 95
  article-title: Tamm Review: Are fuel treatments effective at achieving ecological and social objectives? A systematic review
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 9
  year: 2014
  article-title: Examining historical and current mixed‐severity fire regimes in ponderosa pine and mixed‐conifer forests of western North America
  publication-title: PLoS One
– volume: 115
  start-page: 3314
  year: 2018
  end-page: 3319
  article-title: Rapid growth of the US wildland‐urban interface raises wildfire risk
  publication-title: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA
– year: 2021
– volume: 375
  start-page: 12
  year: 2016
  end-page: 26
  article-title: Historical dominance of low‐severity fire in dry and wet mixed‐conifer forest habitats of the endangered terrestrial Jemez Mountains salamander ( )
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 75
  start-page: 7
  year: 2018
  article-title: Modeling thinning effects on fire behavior with STANDFIRE
  publication-title: Annals of Forest Science
– volume: 11
  start-page: 1
  year: 2002
  end-page: 10
  article-title: Effect of thinning and prescribed burning on crown fire severity in ponderosa pine forests
  publication-title: International Journal of Wildland Fire
– volume: 47
  start-page: 219
  year: 2001
  end-page: 228
  article-title: Design of regular landscape fuel treatment patterns for modifying fire growth and behavior
  publication-title: Forest Science
– volume: 454
  start-page: 117663
  year: 2019
  article-title: What drives ponderosa pine regeneration following wildfire in the western United States?
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 5
  start-page: 348
  year: 2013b
  end-page: 356
  article-title: Making monitoring count: project design for active adaptive management
  publication-title: Journal of Forestry
– volume: 2
  start-page: 797
  year: 2019
  end-page: 804
  article-title: Rethinking resilience to wildfire
  publication-title: Nature Sustainability
– volume: 111
  start-page: 746
  year: 2014
  end-page: 751
  article-title: How risk management can prevent future wildfire disasters in the wildland‐urban interface
  publication-title: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA
– volume: 28
  start-page: 1068
  year: 2018
  end-page: 1080
  article-title: Severe fire weather and intensive forest management increase fire severity in a multi‐ownership landscape
  publication-title: Ecological Applications
– volume: 4
  start-page: 19
  year: 2013
  article-title: Restoration of fire in managed forests: a model to prioritize landscapes and analyze tradeoffs
  publication-title: Ecosphere
– volume: 66
  start-page: 157
  year: 2020
  end-page: 177
  article-title: Simulating the effectiveness of improvement cuts and commercial thinning to enhance fire resistance in west coast dry mixed conifer forests
  publication-title: Forest Science
– volume: 267
  start-page: 74
  year: 2012
  end-page: 92
  article-title: Tree spatial patterns in fire‐frequent forests of western North America, including mechanisms of pattern formation and implications for designing fuel reduction and restoration treatments
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 256
  start-page: 1997
  year: 2008
  end-page: 2006
  article-title: Objectives and considerations for wildland fuel treatment in forested ecosystems of the interior western United States
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 9
  start-page: 1307
  year: 2018
  article-title: Burned forests impact water supplies
  publication-title: Nature Communications
– volume: 11
  start-page: 2121
  year: 2020
  article-title: Fire deficit increases wildfire risk for many communities in the Canadian boreal forest
  publication-title: Nature Communications
– volume: 10
  year: 2019
  article-title: The missing fire: quantifying human exclusion of wildfire in Pacific Northwest forests, USA
  publication-title: Ecosphere
– volume: 246
  start-page: 73
  year: 2007
  end-page: 80
  article-title: Seeing the forest for the fuel: integrating ecological values and fuels management
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 404
  start-page: 184
  year: 2017
  end-page: 196
  article-title: A framework for developing safe and effective large‐fire response in a new fire management paradigm
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– start-page: 1
  year: 2019
  end-page: 9
– volume: 25
  start-page: 3985
  year: 2019
  end-page: 3994
  article-title: Fixing a snag in carbon emissions estimates from wildfires
  publication-title: Global Change Biology
– volume: 429
  start-page: 617
  year: 2018
  end-page: 624
  article-title: The 15‐year post‐treatment response of a mixed‐conifer understory plant community to thinning and burning treatments
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 10
  year: 2019
  article-title: Forest closure and encroachment at the grassland interface: a century‐scale analysis using oblique repeat photography
  publication-title: Ecosphere
– volume: 267
  start-page: 271
  year: 2012
  end-page: 283
  article-title: Analyzing wildfire exposure and source–sink relationships on a fire prone forest landscape
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 151
  start-page: 89
  year: 2014
  end-page: 101
  article-title: Assessing fire effects on forest spatial structure using a fusion of Landsat and airborne LiDAR data in Yosemite National Park
  publication-title: Remote Sensing of Environment
– volume: 72
  start-page: 1683
  year: 2008
  end-page: 1692
  article-title: Monitoring in the context of structured decision‐making and adaptive management
  publication-title: Journal of Wildlife Management
– year: 2015
– volume: 114
  start-page: 384
  year: 2016
  end-page: 395
  article-title: Wilderness in the 21st century: a framework for testing assumptions about ecological intervention in wilderness using a case study of fire ecology in the Rocky Mountains
  publication-title: Journal of Forestry
– volume: 24
  start-page: 571
  year: 2014
  end-page: 590
  article-title: Fuel treatments and landform modify landscape patterns of burn severity in an extreme fire event
  publication-title: Ecological Applications.
– volume: 258
  start-page: 773
  year: 2009
  end-page: 787
  article-title: Effects of fuel treatments on fire severity in an area of wildland–urban interface, Angora Fire, Lake Tahoe Basin, California
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 48
  start-page: 350
  year: 2019
  end-page: 362
  article-title: Human–environmental drivers and impacts of the globally extreme 2017 Chilean fires
  publication-title: Ambio
– volume: 14
  start-page: 3
  year: 2018
  article-title: How does forest recovery following moderate‐severity fire influence effects of subsequent wildfire in mixed‐conifer forests?
  publication-title: Fire Ecology
– volume: 54
  start-page: 661
  year: 2004
  end-page: 676
  article-title: The interaction of fire, fuels, and climate across rocky mountain forests
  publication-title: BioScience
– volume: 19
  start-page: 305
  year: 2009
  end-page: 320
  article-title: Fire treatment effects on vegetation structure, fuels, and potential fire severity in western US forests
  publication-title: Ecological Applications
– volume: 368
  start-page: 580
  year: 2020
  end-page: 581
  article-title: Tree planting is not a simple solution
  publication-title: Science
– volume: 7
  start-page: 436
  year: 2019
  article-title: Out of the ashes: ecological resilience to extreme wildfire, prescribed burns, and indigenous burning in ecosystems
  publication-title: Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution
– volume: 18
  start-page: 3
  year: 2013
  article-title: The many elements of traditional fire knowledge: synthesis, classification, and aids to cross‐cultural problem solving in fire‐dependent systems around the world
  publication-title: Ecology and Society
– volume: 25
  start-page: 182
  year: 2016
  end-page: 190
  article-title: Wildland fire limits subsequent fire occurrence
  publication-title: International Journal of Wildland Fire
– volume: 103
  start-page: 357
  year: 2005
  end-page: 362
  article-title: Western pine forests with continuing frequent fire regimes: Possible reference sites for management
  publication-title: Journal of Forestry
– volume: 19
  start-page: 238
  year: 2010
  end-page: 251
  article-title: The wildland–urban interface fire problem—current approaches and research needs
  publication-title: International Journal of Wildland Fire
– volume: 5
  start-page: 1908
  year: 2015
  end-page: 1918
  article-title: Local and global pyrogeographic evidence that indigenous fire management creates pyrodiversity
  publication-title: Ecology and Evolution
– year: 2003
– volume: 27
  start-page: 26
  year: 2017
  end-page: 36
  article-title: Climate change and the eco‐hydrology of fire: Will area burned increase in a warming western USA?
  publication-title: Ecological Applications
– volume: 8
  year: 2017
  article-title: Contemporary patterns of fire extent and severity in forests of the Pacific Northwest, USA (1985–2010)
  publication-title: Ecosphere
– year: 1996
– volume: 2
  start-page: 1
  year: 2011
  end-page: 14
  article-title: Impacts of fire exclusion and recent managed fire on forest structure in old growth Sierra Nevada mixed‐conifer forests
  publication-title: Ecosphere
– volume: 11
  start-page: 12
  year: 2015
  end-page: 30
  article-title: Calibration and validation of immediate post‐fire satellite‐derived data to three severity metrics
  publication-title: Fire Ecology
– volume: 46
  start-page: 1375
  year: 2016
  end-page: 1385
  article-title: Prior wildfires influence burn severity of subsequent large fires
  publication-title: Canadian Journal of Forest Research
– volume: 349
  start-page: 1280
  year: 2015b
  end-page: 1281
  article-title: Reform forest fire management
  publication-title: Science
– volume: 6
  start-page: 77
  year: 2010
  end-page: 85
  article-title: Burn severity of areas reburned by wildfires in the Gila National Forest, New Mexico, USA
  publication-title: Fire Ecology.
– volume: 10
  start-page: 83
  year: 2012
  end-page: 90
  article-title: Can fuel‐reduction treatments really increase forest carbon storage in the western US by reducing future fire emissions?
  publication-title: Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment
– volume: 25
  start-page: 1341
  year: 2015
  end-page: 1357
  article-title: Late Holocene fire and vegetation reconstruction from the western Klamath Mountains, California, USA: a multi‐disciplinary approach for examining potential human land‐use impacts
  publication-title: Holocene
– volume: 147
  start-page: 1
  year: 2016
  end-page: 17
  article-title: Assessing the impacts of federal forest planning on wildfire risk mitigation in the Pacific Northwest, USA
  publication-title: Landscape and Urban Planning
– volume: 9
  start-page: 59
  year: 1994
  end-page: 77
  article-title: Landscape dynamics in crown fire ecosystems
  publication-title: Landscape Ecology
– volume: 10
  start-page: 344
  year: 2008
  end-page: 354
  article-title: The economics of alternative fuel reduction treatments in western United States dry forests: Financial and policy implications from the National Fire and Fire Surrogate Study
  publication-title: Forest Policy and Economics
– volume: 110
  start-page: 392
  year: 2012
  end-page: 401
  article-title: Using fire to increase the scale, benefits, and future maintenance of fuels treatments
  publication-title: Journal of Forestry
– volume: 24
  start-page: 256
  year: 2006
  end-page: 268
  article-title: Evaluating the purpose, extent, and ecological restoration applications of indigenous burning practices in southwestern Washington
  publication-title: Ecological Restoration
– volume: 366
  start-page: 221
  year: 2016
  end-page: 250
  article-title: Tamm Review: Management of mixed‐severity fire regime forests in Oregon, Washington, and Northern California
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 31
  start-page: 341
  year: 2017
  end-page: 354
  article-title: Greater temperature and precipitation extremes intensify western U.S. droughts, wildfire severity, and Sierra Nevada tree mortality
  publication-title: Journal of Climate
– volume: 6
  start-page: 1097
  year: 2018
  end-page: 1111
  article-title: Climate change and future wildfire in the western United States: an ecological approach to nonstationarity
  publication-title: Earth’s Future
– volume: 11
  start-page: 24
  year: 2001
  end-page: 29
  article-title: Measuring forest restoration effectiveness in reducing hazardous fuels
  publication-title: Journal of Forestry
– volume: 7
  year: 2012
  article-title: Housing arrangement and location determine the likelihood of housing loss due to wildfire
  publication-title: PLoS One
– volume: 47
  start-page: 356
  year: 2010
  end-page: 365
  article-title: Fire intensity, fire severity and ecosystem response in heathlands: factors affecting the regeneration of
  publication-title: Journal of Applied Ecology
– volume: 365
  start-page: 107
  year: 2016
  end-page: 118
  article-title: Tree mortality and structural change following mixed‐severity fire in forests of Oregon’s western Cascades, USA
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 23
  start-page: 686
  year: 2014
  end-page: 697
  article-title: Modern fire regime resembles historical fire regime in a ponderosa pine forest on Native American lands
  publication-title: International Journal of Wildland Fire
– volume: 314
  start-page: 193
  year: 2014
  end-page: 207
  article-title: Fire behavior in masticated fuels: a review
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 20
  start-page: 223
  year: 2011
  end-page: 239
  article-title: Quantifying the fire regime distributions for severity in Yosemite National Park, California, USA
  publication-title: International Journal of Wildland Fire
– volume: 14
  start-page: 369
  year: 2016
  end-page: 378
  article-title: Changing disturbance regimes, ecological memory, and forest resilience
  publication-title: Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment
– volume: 16
  start-page: 13
  year: 2020
  article-title: Retrospective analysis of burn windows for fire and fuels management: an example from the Lake Tahoe Basin, California, USA
  publication-title: Fire Ecology
– volume: 3
  start-page: 18
  year: 2007
  end-page: 33
  article-title: Effects of multiple wildland fires on ponderosa pine stand structure in two southwestern wilderness areas, USA
  publication-title: Fire Ecology
– year: 2020
– volume: 23
  start-page: 825
  year: 2014
  end-page: 830
  article-title: Unsupported inferences of high‐severity fire in historical dry forests of the western United States: response to Williams and Baker
  publication-title: Global Ecology and Biogeography
– volume: 62
  start-page: 549
  year: 2012
  end-page: 560
  article-title: The effects of forest fuel‐reduction treatments in the United States
  publication-title: BioScience
– volume: 27
  start-page: 377
  year: 2018
  end-page: 386
  article-title: Human‐related ignitions concurrent with high winds promote large wildfires across the USA
  publication-title: International Journal of Wildland Fire
– volume: 24
  start-page: 94
  year: 2014
  end-page: 107
  article-title: Long‐term effects of fire severity on oak‐conifer dynamics in the southern Cascades
  publication-title: Ecological Applications
– volume: 24
  start-page: 341
  year: 2018
  end-page: 351
  article-title: Declining old‐forest species as a legacy of large trees lost
  publication-title: Diversity and Distributions
– year: 1991
– volume: 274
  start-page: 17
  year: 2012b
  end-page: 28
  article-title: Fuel treatment effectiveness in California yellow pine and mixed conifer forests
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 11
  start-page: 36
  year: 2001
  end-page: 41
  article-title: The role of indigenous burning in land management
  publication-title: Journal of Forestry
– volume: 81
  start-page: 63
  year: 2011
  end-page: 88
  article-title: Testing the accuracy of new methods for reconstructing historical structure of forest landscapes using GLO survey data
  publication-title: Ecological Monographs
– volume: 259
  start-page: 132
  year: 2009
  end-page: 142
  article-title: Long‐term impacts of prescribed burning on regional extent and incidence of wildfires—evidence from 50 years of active fire management in SW Australian forests
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 258
  start-page: 712
  year: 2009
  end-page: 721
  article-title: Thinning and prescribed fire effects on overstory tree and snag structure in dry coniferous forests of the interior Pacific Northwest
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 380
  start-page: 59
  year: 2016
  end-page: 69
  article-title: Weather, fuels, and topography impede wildland fire spread in western US landscapes
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 358
  start-page: 62
  year: 2015
  end-page: 79
  article-title: Mixed severity fire effects within the Rim fire: relative importance of local climate, fire weather, topography, and forest structure
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 27
  start-page: 1498
  year: 2017
  end-page: 1513
  article-title: Evaluating a new method for reconstructing forest conditions from General Land Office survey records
  publication-title: Ecological Applications
– year: 2011
– volume: 16
  start-page: 702
  year: 2007
  end-page: 711
  article-title: A computational method for optimizing fuel treatment locations
  publication-title: International Journal of Wildland Fire
– volume: 328
  start-page: 326
  year: 2014
  end-page: 334
  article-title: Severity of an uncharacteristically large wildfire, the Rim Fire, in forests with relatively restored frequent fire regimes
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 18
  start-page: 903
  year: 2004
  end-page: 912
  article-title: Forest restoration and fire: principles in the context of place
  publication-title: Conservation Biology
– volume: 6
  start-page: 151
  year: 2018
  article-title: Human fire legacies on ecological landscapes
  publication-title: Frontiers in Earth Science
– volume: 41
  start-page: 1018
  year: 2011
  end-page: 1030
  article-title: Simulating fuel treatment effects in dry forests of the western United States: testing the principles of a fire‐safe forest
  publication-title: Canadian Journal of Forest Research
– volume: 267
  start-page: 199
  year: 2012
  end-page: 208
  article-title: Ten years after wildfires: How does varying tree mortality impact fire hazard and forest resiliency?
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 365
  start-page: 76
  year: 2019
  end-page: 79
  article-title: The global tree restoration potential
  publication-title: Science
– volume: 353
  start-page: 221
  year: 2015
  end-page: 231
  article-title: Tree survival scales to community‐level effects following mixed‐severity fire in a mixed conifer forest
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 10
  year: 2019
  article-title: How big is enough? Vegetation structure impacts effective fuel treatment width and forest resiliency
  publication-title: Ecosphere
– volume: 24
  start-page: 892
  year: 2015
  end-page: 899
  article-title: Climate change presents increased potential for very large fires in the contiguous United States
  publication-title: International Journal of Wildland Fire
– volume: 8
  year: 2017
  article-title: Improving the use of early timber inventories in reconstructing historical dry forests and fire in the western United States
  publication-title: Ecosphere
– volume: 110
  start-page: 429
  year: 2012
  end-page: 439
  article-title: A restoration framework for federal forests in the Pacific Northwest
  publication-title: Journal of Forestry
– volume: 113
  start-page: 425
  year: 2015
  end-page: 429
  article-title: Restoration is preparation for the future
  publication-title: Journal of Forestry
– volume: 5
  start-page: 100045
  year: 2020
  article-title: Wildfire management in Canada: Review, challenges and opportunities
  publication-title: Progress in Disaster Science
– volume: 60
  start-page: 602
  year: 2010
  end-page: 613
  article-title: Climate change and bark beetles of the western United States and Canada: direct and indirect effects
  publication-title: BioScience
– volume: 104
  start-page: 10743
  year: 2007
  end-page: 10748
  article-title: Reburn severity in managed and unmanaged vegetation in a large wildfire
  publication-title: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA
– volume: 18
  start-page: 354
  year: 2020
  end-page: 360
  article-title: Fire and climate change: conserving seasonally dry forests is still possible
  publication-title: Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment
– volume: 31
  start-page: 976
  year: 2017
  end-page: 985
  article-title: A critique of the historical‐fire‐regime concept in conservation
  publication-title: Conservation Biology
– volume: 13
  start-page: 148
  year: 2017
  end-page: 171
  article-title: Accommodating mixed‐severity fire to restore and maintain ecosystem integrity with a focus on the Sierra Nevada of California, USA
  publication-title: Fire Ecology
– volume: 80
  start-page: 292
  year: 2007
  end-page: 300
  article-title: A simulation study of thinning and fuel treatments on a wildland–urban interface in eastern Oregon, USA
  publication-title: Landscape and Urban Planning
– volume: 113
  start-page: 40
  year: 2015a
  end-page: 48
  article-title: Constraints on mechanized treatment significantly limit mechanical fuels reduction extent in the Sierra Nevada
  publication-title: Journal of Forestry
– volume: 30
  year: 2020
  article-title: Limitations to recovery following wildfire in dry forests of southern Colorado and northern New Mexico, USA
  publication-title: Ecological Applications
– volume: 76
  start-page: 747
  year: 1995
  end-page: 762
  article-title: The relative importance of fuels and weather on fire behavior in subalpine forests
  publication-title: Ecology
– volume: 287
  start-page: 113
  year: 2013
  end-page: 122
  article-title: Snag longevity and surface fuel accumulation following post‐fire logging in a ponderosa pine dominated forest
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 9
  start-page: 165
  year: 2018
  article-title: What drives low‐severity fire in the southwestern USA?
  publication-title: Forests
– volume: 3
  start-page: 444
  year: 1973
  end-page: 464
  article-title: Fire in the boreal forest
  publication-title: Quaternary Research
– volume: 10
  year: 2019
  article-title: Contributions of fire refugia to resilient ponderosa pine and dry mixed‐conifer forest landscapes
  publication-title: Ecosphere
– volume: 480
  start-page: 118645
  year: 2021
  article-title: Repeated fall prescribed fire in previously thinned increases growth and resistance to other disturbances
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 115
  start-page: 343
  year: 2017
  end-page: 353
  article-title: Returning fire to the land: celebrating traditional knowledge and fire
  publication-title: Journal of Forestry
– volume: 23
  start-page: 1243
  year: 2013a
  end-page: 1249
  article-title: Latent resilience in ponderosa pine forest: effects of resumed frequent fire
  publication-title: Ecological Applications
– volume: 44
  start-page: 843
  year: 2014
  end-page: 854
  article-title: Wildfire‐contingent effects of fuel treatments can promote ecological resilience in seasonally dry conifer forests
  publication-title: Canadian Journal of Forest Research
– volume: 3
  start-page: 101
  year: 2020
  end-page: 109
  article-title: Barriers and enablers for prescribed burns for wildfire management in California
  publication-title: Nature Sustainability
– volume: 28
  start-page: 1626
  year: 2018
  end-page: 1639
  article-title: From the stand scale to the landscape scale: predicting the spatial patterns of forest regeneration after disturbance
  publication-title: Ecological Applications
– volume: 9
  start-page: 14
  year: 2013
  end-page: 25
  article-title: Opportunities for improved fire use and management in California: lessons from western Australia
  publication-title: Fire Ecology
– volume: 106
  start-page: 10706
  year: 2009
  end-page: 10711
  article-title: Implementation of National Fire Plan treatments near the wildland‐urban interface in the western United States
  publication-title: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA
– volume: 515
  start-page: 58
  year: 2014
  end-page: 66
  article-title: Learning to coexist with wildfire
  publication-title: Nature
– volume: 47
  year: 2020
  article-title: Warmer and drier fire seasons contribute to increases in area burned at high severity in western US forests from 1985–2017
  publication-title: Geophysical Research Letters
– volume: 7
  start-page: 2420
  year: 2017
  article-title: Potential decline in carbon carrying capacity under projected climate‐wildfire interactions in the Sierra Nevada
  publication-title: Scientific Reports
– volume: 1
  start-page: 1
  year: 2008
  end-page: 7
  article-title: Fire probability, fuel treatment effectiveness and ecological tradeoffs in western U.S. public forests
  publication-title: Open Forest Science Journal
– volume: 44
  start-page: 136
  year: 2007
  end-page: 146
  article-title: Wildland fire effects on forest structure over an altitudinal gradient, Grand Canyon National Park, USA
  publication-title: Journal of Applied Ecology
– volume: 36
  start-page: 2803
  year: 2006
  end-page: 2814
  article-title: Estimating canopy fuel characteristics in five conifer stands in the western United States using tree and stand measurements
  publication-title: Canadian Journal of Forest Research
– volume: 19
  start-page: 537
  year: 2011
  end-page: 544
  article-title: Salvage logging versus the use of burnt wood as a nurse object to promote post‐fire tree seedling establishment
  publication-title: Restoration Ecology
– volume: 6
  start-page: 493
  year: 2008
  end-page: 498
  article-title: Carbon protection and fire risk reduction: toward a full accounting of forest carbon offsets
  publication-title: Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment
– volume: 211
  start-page: 83
  year: 2005
  end-page: 96
  article-title: Basic principles of forest fuel reduction treatments
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 406
  start-page: 28
  year: 2017
  end-page: 36
  article-title: Changing spatial patterns of stand‐replacing fire in California conifer forests
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 211
  start-page: 117
  year: 2005
  end-page: 139
  article-title: Dry forests and wildland fires of the inland Northwest USA: Contrasting the landscape ecology of the pre‐settlement and modern eras
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 7
  start-page: 32
  year: 2011
  end-page: 50
  article-title: The effects of conifer encroachment and overstory structure on fuels and fire in an oak woodland landscape
  publication-title: Fire Ecology
– volume: 303
  start-page: 46
  year: 2013
  end-page: 60
  article-title: Wildfire and fuel treatment effects on forest carbon dynamics in the western United States
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 118
  year: 2021
  article-title: Native American fire management at an ancient wildland–urban interface in the Southwest United States
  publication-title: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA
– volume: 27
  start-page: 781
  year: 2018
  end-page: 799
  article-title: Historical patterns of wildfire ignition sources in California ecosystems
  publication-title: International Journal of Wildland Fire
– volume: 2
  start-page: 48
  year: 2019
  article-title: Fire exclusion destroys habitats for at‐risk species in a British Columbia protected area
  publication-title: Fire
– volume: 408
  start-page: 16
  year: 2018
  end-page: 24
  article-title: Restoration benefits of re‐entry with resource objective wildfire on a ponderosa pine landscape in northern Arizona, USA
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 79
  start-page: 127
  year: 2009
  end-page: 154
  article-title: Environmental controls on the distribution of wildfire at multiple spatial scales
  publication-title: Ecological Monographs
– volume: 127
  start-page: 55
  year: 2000
  end-page: 66
  article-title: The use of shaded fuelbreaks in landscape fire management
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 106
  start-page: 78
  year: 2008
  end-page: 82
  article-title: Collaborating for success: community wildfire protection planning in the Arizona White Mountains
  publication-title: Journal of Forestry
– volume: 450
  start-page: 117517
  year: 2019
  article-title: Effects of understory fire management treatments on California hazelnut, an ecocultural resource of the Karuk and Yurok Indians in the Pacific Northwest
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 406
  start-page: 228
  year: 2017
  end-page: 241
  article-title: Efficacy of variable density thinning and prescribed fire for restoring forest heterogeneity to mixed‐conifer forest in the central Sierra Nevada, CA
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– start-page: 46
  year: 2012a
  end-page: 62
– volume: 1
  start-page: 505
  year: 2020
  end-page: 515
  article-title: Vegetation fires in the Anthropocene
  publication-title: Nature Reviews Earth & Environment
– volume: 113
  start-page: 11770
  year: 2016
  end-page: 11775
  article-title: Impact of anthropogenic climate change on wildfire across western US forests
  publication-title: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA
– volume: 454
  start-page: 117659
  year: 2019
  article-title: First‐entry wildfires can create opening and tree clump patterns characteristic of resilient forests
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 12
  start-page: 99
  year: 2016
  end-page: 116
  article-title: Relating fire‐caused change in forest structure to remotely sensed estimates of fire severity
  publication-title: Fire Ecology
– volume: 23
  start-page: 1
  year: 2014
  end-page: 8
  article-title: Is fire severity increasing in the Sierra Nevada, California, USA?
  publication-title: International Journal of Wildland Fire
– volume: 114
  start-page: 4582
  year: 2017
  end-page: 4590
  article-title: Adapt to more wildfire in western North American forests as climate changes
  publication-title: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA
– volume: 23
  start-page: 10
  year: 2018
  article-title: Escaping social‐ecological traps through tribal stewardship on national forest lands in the Pacific Northwest, United States of America
  publication-title: Ecology and Society
– year: 2001
– volume: 9
  start-page: 1177
  year: 2006
  end-page: 1189
  article-title: Fire severity in conifer forests of the Sierra Nevada, California
  publication-title: Ecosystems
– volume: 114
  start-page: 610
  year: 2016a
  end-page: 618
  article-title: Using risk analysis to reveal opportunities for the management of unplanned ignitions in wilderness
  publication-title: Journal of Forestry
– volume: 155
  start-page: 399
  year: 2002
  end-page: 423
  article-title: Disturbances and structural development of natural forest ecosystems with silvicultural implications, using Douglas‐fir forests as an example
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 30
  start-page: 1805
  year: 2015
  end-page: 1835
  article-title: Restoring fire‐prone Inland Pacific landscapes: seven core principles
  publication-title: Landscape Ecology
– volume: 258
  start-page: 1025
  year: 2009
  end-page: 1037
  article-title: The use of historical range and variability (HRV) in landscape management
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 18
  start-page: 775
  year: 2009
  end-page: 790
  article-title: Validation of FIRETEC wind‐flows over a canopy and a fuel‐break
  publication-title: International Journal of Wildland Fire
– volume: 437
  start-page: 70
  year: 2019
  end-page: 86
  article-title: Forest structure and pattern vary by climate and landform across active‐fire landscapes in the montane Sierra Nevada
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– year: 2018
– volume: 20
  start-page: 362
  year: 2010
  end-page: 380
  article-title: Fire regimes, forest change, and self‐organization in an old‐growth mixed‐conifer forest, Yosemite National Park, USA
  publication-title: Ecological Applications
– volume: 29
  start-page: 190
  year: 2020
  end-page: 200
  article-title: Ecosystem management applications of resource objective wildfires in forests of the Grand Canyon National Park, USA
  publication-title: International Journal of Wildland Fire
– volume: 2
  start-page: 9
  year: 2019
  article-title: A socio‐ecological approach to mitigating wildfire vulnerability in the wildland urban interface: a case study from the 2017 Thomas Fire
  publication-title: Fire
– volume: 9
  year: 2018
  article-title: Evidence for scale‐dependent topographic controls on wildfire spread
  publication-title: Ecosphere
– volume: 113
  start-page: 49
  year: 2015
  end-page: 56
  article-title: Forest fire severity patterns of resource objective wildfires in the southern Sierra Nevada
  publication-title: Journal of Forestry
– volume: 18
  start-page: 976
  year: 2004
  end-page: 986
  article-title: Beyond smoke and mirrors: a synthesis of fire policy and science
  publication-title: Conservation Biology
– year: 2021
  article-title: Evidence for widespread changes in western North American forest structure, composition, and wildfire regimes
  publication-title: Ecological Applications
– volume: 21
  start-page: 1004
  year: 2012
  end-page: 1013
  article-title: Fuel treatment effects on tree mortality following wildfire in dry mixed conifer forests, Washington State, USA
  publication-title: International Journal of Wildland Fire
– volume: 20
  start-page: 717
  year: 2017
  end-page: 732
  article-title: Managed wildfire effects on forest resilience and water in the Sierra Nevada
  publication-title: Ecosystems
– volume: 7
  start-page: 64
  year: 2016
  article-title: Application of wildfire risk assessment results to wildfire response planning in the southern Sierra Nevada, California, USA
  publication-title: Forests
– volume: 7
  year: 2016
  article-title: Influence of fire disturbance and biophysical heterogeneity on pre‐settlement ponderosa pine and mixed conifer forests
  publication-title: Ecosphere
– volume: 366
  year: 2019
  article-title: Comment on “The global tree restoration potential”
  publication-title: Science
– volume: 18
  start-page: 165
  year: 2009
  end-page: 175
  article-title: Effectiveness of prescribed fire as a fuel treatment in Californian coniferous forests
  publication-title: International Journal of Wildland Fire
– volume: 116
  start-page: 11319
  year: 2019
  end-page: 11328
  article-title: Short‐interval severe fire erodes the resilience of subalpine lodgepole pine forests
  publication-title: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA
– volume: 16
  start-page: 673
  year: 2007
  article-title: A fuel treatment reduces fire severity and increases suppression efficiency in a mixed conifer forest
  publication-title: International Journal of Wildland Fire
– volume: 338
  start-page: 84
  year: 2015
  end-page: 91
  article-title: Post‐fire logging reduces surface woody fuels up to four decades following wildfire
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 17
  start-page: 539
  year: 2002
  end-page: 557
  article-title: Landscape‐scale controls over 20th century fire occurrence in two large Rocky Mountain (USA) wilderness areas
  publication-title: Landscape Ecology
– volume: 9
  start-page: 2838
  year: 2019
  article-title: Vegetation‐fire feedback reduces projected area burned under climate change
  publication-title: Scientific Reports
– volume: 26
  start-page: 6180
  year: 2020
  end-page: 6189
  article-title: Changing climate reallocates the carbon debt of frequent‐fire forests
  publication-title: Global Change Biology
– volume: 291
  start-page: 442
  year: 2013
  end-page: 457
  article-title: Restoring forest resilience: from reference spatial patterns to silvicultural prescriptions and monitoring
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 12
  start-page: 52
  year: 2016
  end-page: 72
  article-title: Patterns and trends in burned area and fire severity from 1984 to 2010 in the Sierra de San Pedro Mártir, Baja California, Mexico
  publication-title: Fire Ecology
– volume: 18
  start-page: 235
  year: 2020
  end-page: 244
  article-title: Disturbance refugia within mosaics of forest fire, drought, and insect outbreaks
  publication-title: Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment
– volume: 6
  start-page: 290
  year: 1995
  end-page: 311
  article-title: Managing local environmental conflict amidst national controversy
  publication-title: International Journal of Conflict Management
– volume: 16
  year: 2020
  article-title: How climate change and fire exclusion drive wildfire regimes at actionable scales
  publication-title: Environmental Research Letters
– volume: 33
  start-page: 1195
  year: 2018
  end-page: 1209
  article-title: Influence of landscape structure, topography, and forest type on spatial variation in historical fire regimes, Central Oregon, USA
  publication-title: Landscape Ecology
– volume: 21
  start-page: 210
  year: 2012
  end-page: 218
  article-title: Impediments to prescribed fire across agency, landscape and manager: an example from northern California
  publication-title: International Journal of Wildland Fire
– volume: 215
  start-page: 21
  year: 2005
  end-page: 36
  article-title: Experimental fuel treatment impacts on forest structure, potential fire behavior, and predicted tree mortality in a California mixed conifer forest
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 28
  start-page: 874
  year: 2019
  article-title: Policy barriers and opportunities for prescribed fire application in the western United States
  publication-title: International Journal of Wildland Fire
– volume: 25
  start-page: 1478
  year: 2015a
  end-page: 1492
  article-title: Wildland fire as a self‐regulating mechanism: the role of previous burns and weather in limiting fire progression
  publication-title: Ecological Applications
– volume: 6
  start-page: 275
  year: 2015b
  article-title: Wildland fire deficit and surplus in the western United States, 1984–2012
  publication-title: Ecosphere
– volume: 30
  year: 2020
  article-title: Fuel treatment effectiveness in the context of landform, vegetation, and large, wind‐driven wildfires
  publication-title: Ecological Applications
– volume: 349
  start-page: 66
  year: 2015
  end-page: 72
  article-title: Interactions of fuel treatments, wildfire severity, and carbon dynamics in dry conifer forests
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 19
  start-page: 163
  year: 2009
  end-page: 180
  article-title: Carbon dynamics of Oregon and northern California forests and potential land‐based carbon storage
  publication-title: Ecological Applications
– volume: 24
  start-page: 71
  year: 2006
  end-page: 78
  article-title: Wilderness management: the complexity of managing fire‐dependent ecosystems in wilderness: relict ponderosa pine in the Bob Marshall Wilderness
  publication-title: Ecological Restoration
– volume: 16
  start-page: 207
  year: 2018
  end-page: 212
  article-title: Large‐scale restoration increases carbon stability under projected climate and wildfire regimes
  publication-title: Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment
– volume: 18
  start-page: 791
  year: 2009
  end-page: 801
  article-title: The efficacy of fire and fuels reduction treatments in a Sierra Nevada pine plantation
  publication-title: International Journal of Wildland Fire
– volume: 261
  start-page: 1121
  year: 2011
  end-page: 1142
  article-title: Forest responses to climate change in the northwestern United States: ecophysiological foundations for adaptive management
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 2
  start-page: 30
  year: 2019
  article-title: We’re not doing enough prescribed fire in the western United States to mitigate wildfire risk
  publication-title: Fire
– volume: 422
  start-page: 147
  year: 2018
  end-page: 160
  article-title: Changes in forest structure since 1860 in ponderosa pine dominated forests in the Colorado and Wyoming Front Range, USA
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 10
  year: 2019
  article-title: Climate will increasingly determine post‐fire tree regeneration success in low‐elevation forests, Northern Rockies, USA
  publication-title: Ecosphere
– volume: 4
  start-page: 1
  year: 2013
  end-page: 28
  article-title: Modern departures in fire severity and area vary by forest type, Sierra Nevada and southern Cascades, California, USA
  publication-title: Ecosphere
– volume: 89
  start-page: 717
  year: 2008
  end-page: 728
  article-title: Multi‐season climate synchronized forest fires throughout the 20th century, northern Rockies, USA
  publication-title: Ecology
– volume: 389
  start-page: 395
  year: 2017
  end-page: 403
  article-title: Efficacy of resource objective wildfires for restoration of ponderosa pine ( ) forests in northern Arizona
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 8
  start-page: 41
  year: 2012
  end-page: 57
  article-title: Trends in wildfire severity: 1984 to 2010 in the Sierra Nevada, Modoc Plateau, and southern Cascades, California, USA
  publication-title: Fire Ecology
– volume: 4
  start-page: 1
  year: 2021
  end-page: 8
  article-title: Challenges to the reforestation pipeline in the United States
  publication-title: Frontiers in Forests and Global Change
– volume: 9
  start-page: 41
  year: 2020
  article-title: The importance of large‐diameter trees to fuel evolution following reintroduced fire in a mixed‐conifer forest in Yosemite National Park, California, USA
  publication-title: Ecological Processes
– year: 2021
  article-title: Wildfire and climate change adaptation of western North American forests: a case for intentional management
  publication-title: Ecological Applications
– volume: 7
  start-page: 409
  year: 2009
  end-page: 414
  article-title: Fuel treatment effects on tree‐based forest carbon storage and emissions under modeled wildfire scenarios
  publication-title: Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment
– volume: 441
  start-page: 20
  year: 2019
  end-page: 31
  article-title: Status and trends of fire activity in southern California yellow pine and mixed conifer forests
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 18
  start-page: 686
  year: 2009
  end-page: 697
  article-title: Novel fuelbed characteristics associated with mechanical mastication treatments in northern California and south‐western Oregon, USA
  publication-title: International Journal of Wildland Fire
– volume: 115
  start-page: 300
  year: 2017
  end-page: 308
  article-title: An evaluation of the forest service hazardous fuels treatment program—Are we treating enough to promote resiliency or reduce hazard?
  publication-title: Journal of Forestry
– volume: 371
  start-page: 20150178
  year: 2016
  article-title: Increasing western US forest wildfire activity: sensitivity to changes in the timing of spring
  publication-title: Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B
– volume: 432
  start-page: 209
  year: 2019
  end-page: 224
  article-title: Tamm Review: Reforestation for resilience in dry western U.S. forests
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– year: 2017
– volume: 96
  start-page: 1846
  year: 2015
  end-page: 1855
  article-title: Low‐severity fire increases tree defense against bark beetle attacks
  publication-title: Ecology
– volume: 7
  year: 2016
  article-title: Evaluating potential trade‐offs among fuel treatment strategies in mixed‐conifer forests of the Sierra Nevada
  publication-title: Ecosphere
– volume: 114
  start-page: 2946
  year: 2017
  end-page: 2951
  article-title: Human‐started wildfires expand the fire niche across the United States
  publication-title: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA
– volume: 7
  year: 2016
  article-title: Does increased forest protection correspond to higher fire severity in frequent‐fire forests of the western United States?
  publication-title: Ecosphere
– volume: 23
  start-page: 483
  year: 2020
  end-page: 494
  article-title: Local forest structure variability increases resilience to wildfire in dry western U.S. coniferous forests
  publication-title: Ecology Letters
– volume: 262
  start-page: 703
  year: 2011
  end-page: 717
  article-title: The ecology of mixed severity fire regimes in Washington, Oregon, and northern California
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 449
  start-page: 117440
  year: 2019
  article-title: Previous fires and roads limit wildfire growth in Arizona and New Mexico, U.S.A
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 20
  start-page: 59
  year: 2011
  article-title: Allocating fuel breaks to optimally protect structures in the wildland–urban interface
  publication-title: International Journal of Wildland Fire
– volume: 255
  start-page: 3170
  year: 2008
  end-page: 3184
  article-title: The influence of fuels treatment and landscape arrangement on simulated fire behavior, southern Cascade Range, California
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 110
  start-page: 381
  year: 2012
  end-page: 391
  article-title: The collaborative forest landscape restoration program: a history and overview of the first projects
  publication-title: Journal of Forestry
SSID ssj0000222
Score 2.6910324
SecondaryResourceType review_article
Snippet We review science‐based adaptation strategies for western North American (wNA) forests that include restoring active fire regimes and fostering resilient...
We review science-based adaptation strategies for western North American (wNA) forests that include restoring active fire regimes and fostering resilient...
SourceID pubmed
wiley
SourceType Index Database
Publisher
StartPage e02433
SubjectTerms adaptive management
carbon
Climate Change
Climate Change and Western Wildfires
cultural burning
ecological resilience
Fires
forest management
Forests
fuel treatments
managed wildfire
mechanical thinning
North America
prescribed fire
restoration
Wildfires
wildland fire
Title Adapting western North American forests to climate change and wildfires: 10 common questions
URI https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002%2Feap.2433
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34339088
Volume 31
hasFullText 1
inHoldings 1
isFullTextHit
isPrint
link http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwjV07a8MwEBZtSqFL6Stt-kJD6aZGlmzZ7haKQygkZGggQ8HoCYXihDgd-u97spzH2EUWyAJz0t19Z919QugJfL6imhoiZZqQOHeCSKNzIkGxWCrBOkhfjTyeiNEsfp8n8zar0tfCBH6I7Q83rxmNvfYKLlXd35GGWrl8YTHnh-jIV9Z63nwWT3dWOJwgAHyAcBli9Q3xLGX9zcw9p7MPTBvPMjxDpy0kxIOwhufowFYX6DhcEvkLvUK3vW6xq0qDCa1a1pfoc2Dk0ucv45b4ADfHMXhzHIMBmcJAjdcLrL-_AKRaHCp-sawMhq8yDkxf_YojikEOsDVx4y_8nrxCs2Hx8TYi7bUJRMc558Q4xixNrLa5FNwoCi3LHQRyueeOggHlRMakZpFnruHW8MQ4CFtAdU2mI95FnWpR2RuEY-UiEylGEw1Iw5jMpWlGhaNWCAf-r4eugwTLZeDGKDnI1adO9dBzI9LtQKBHZiUIv_TCL4vB1D9v__viHTphPp-kSSW5R5316sc-ACBYq8dm5aGdTMd_oLGx2A
linkProvider Wiley-Blackwell
linkToHtml http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwjV3NS8MwFA9zInoRv6bzMwfxVpcmbdrqaUjH1G3ssMEOQknzAYJ0w82D_70vTbvt6KUNpIHykvfe7yXv_YLQPfj8nEiiPCGi0AsSwz2hZOIJUCwaCbAOwlYjD0e8Pw3eZuGsgZ7rWhjHD7HecLOaUdprq-B2Q7qzYQ3VYvFIA8Z20G7AaWS1kgbjjRl2RwiAHyBehmC9Zp4ltFOP3PI628i0dC29I3RYYULcdZN4jBq6OEF77pbIX2ilsmq10k1ZGgyo9HJ5ij66SixsAjOumA9weR6D6_MYDNAUOpZ4Ncfy6xNQqsau5BeLQmH4K2XA9i2fsE8wCALWJi4dhl2UZ2jaSycvfa-6N8GTQcKYpwylmoRa6kRwpnICT5oYiOQSSx4FHbnhMRWS-pa6hmnFQmUgbgHdVbH0WQs1i3mhLxAOcuMrP6cklAA1lIpNFMWEG6I5N-AA2-jcSTBbOHKMjIFcbe5UGz2UIl13OH5kmoHwMyv8LO2O7fvyvx_eof3-ZDjIBq-j9yt0QG1ySZlXco2aq-8ffQPoYJXflqvgDxqGtDg
linkToPdf http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwjV07T8MwELagCMSCeBXK0wNiC3XsxEnYKkhVXlUHKnVAihw_JCSURrQM_HvOdvoYWRJLjqXo4rv7Lnf3GaEb8PklkUQFQiRxEGWGB0LJLBCgWDQRYB2E7UZ-G_LBOHqexJOmqtL2wnh-iOUPN6sZzl5bBa-V6a5IQ7Wo72jE2Cbacrk-y-ocjVZW2GcQAD5AuAyx-oJ4ltDuYuWa01kHps6z9PfRXgMJcc9_wwO0oatDtO0PifyFUS6bUTtfdaXBgkYtZ0foo6dEbeuXcUN8gF06Bi_SMRiQKUzM8HyK5dcngFSNfccvFpXC8FbKgOmb3eOQYJADbE3s_IXdk8do3M_fHwZBc2xCIKOMsUAZSjWJtdSZ4EyVBK40MxDIZZY7CiZKw1MqJA0tcw3TisXKQNgCqqtSGbI2alXTSp8iHJUmVGFJSSwBaSiVmiRJCTdEc27A_3XQiZdgUXtujIKBXG3pVAfdOpEuJzw9Mi1A-IUVfpH3RvZ-9t8Hr9HO6LFfvD4NX87RLrWlJa6q5AK15t8_-hKwwby8cpvgD04Ys2o
openUrl ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info%3Aofi%2Fenc%3AUTF-8&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fsummon.serialssolutions.com&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=Adapting+western+North+American+forests+to+climate+change+and+wildfires%3A+10+common+questions&rft.jtitle=Ecological+applications&rft.au=Prichard%2C+Susan+J.&rft.au=Hessburg%2C+Paul+F.&rft.au=Hagmann%2C+R.+Keala&rft.au=Povak%2C+Nicholas+A.&rft.date=2021-12-01&rft.issn=1051-0761&rft.eissn=1939-5582&rft.volume=31&rft.issue=8&rft.epage=n%2Fa&rft_id=info:doi/10.1002%2Feap.2433&rft.externalDBID=10.1002%252Feap.2433&rft.externalDocID=EAP2433
thumbnail_l http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/lc.gif&issn=1051-0761&client=summon
thumbnail_m http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/mc.gif&issn=1051-0761&client=summon
thumbnail_s http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/sc.gif&issn=1051-0761&client=summon