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(2003) The role of climate and vegetation change in shaping past and future fire regimes in the north western US and the implications for ecosystem management.

Authors
Shafer S.L. , Marlon J.
Source
Forest Ecology and Management (9)
Type
P - Paper (2851)
Peer Review
2 - Medium (2288)
Audience
S - Specialist (3514)
Pages
5-21
Journal Number
178
Notes

Abstract

Fire is an important part of the disturbance regimes of northwestern US forests and its role in maintaining and altering forest vegetation is evident in the paleoecological record of the region. Long-term reconstructions of Holocene fire regimes, provided by the analysis of charcoal, pollen, and other fire proxies in a network of lake records, indicate that the Pacific Northwest and summer-dry regions of the northern Rocky Mountains experienced their highest fire activity in the early Holocene (11,000–7000 years ago) and during the Medieval Warm Period (ca. 1000 years ago) when drought conditions were more severe than today. In contrast, in summer-wet areas of the northern Rocky Mountains, the period of highest fire activity was registered in the last 7000 years when dry woodland vegetation developed. When synthesized across the entire northwestern US, the paleoecological record reveals that past and present fire regimes are strongly controlled by climate changes occurring on multiple time scales. The scarcity of fires in the 20th century in some northwestern US ecosystems may be the result of successful fire suppression policies, but in wetter forests this absence is consistent with long-term fire regime patterns. In addition, simulations of potential future climate and vegetation indicate that future fire conditions in some parts of the northwestern US could be more severe than they are today. The Holocene record of periods of intensified summer drought is used to assess the nature of future fire–climate–vegetation linkages in the region.

World_link Resources online

Folder Categories
Fire Data Availability
 
Tag_blue Keywords
Fire history Charcoal records Holocene climate change Future fire conditions Western US
 
Map Countries
United States
 
Map Regions
North America
 

Entered by: John Atkinson, 3/2009

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