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Past and Present Vulnerability of Closed-Canopy Temperate Forests to Altered Fire Regimes: A Comparison of the Pacific Northwest, New Zealand, and Patagonia
BioScience (2014)
  • Cathy Whitlock, Montana State University-Bozeman
  • David B. McWethy, Montana State University-Bozeman
  • Alan J. Tepley, University of Colorado, Boulder
  • Thomas T. Veblen, University of Colorado Boulder
  • Andrés Holz, Portland State University
  • Matt S. McGlone
  • George L. W. Perry, University of Auckland
  • J M Wilmshurst
  • Samuel W. Wood, University of Tasmania
Abstract
The relative importance of people and climate in shaping prehistoric fire regimes is debated around the world, and this discussion has helped inform our understanding of past and present ecosystem dynamics. Evidence for extensive anthropogenic burning of temperate closed-canopy forests prior to European settlement is geographically variable, and the factors responsible for this variability are not well resolved. We set out to explain the differences in the influence of prehistoric human-set fires in seasonally dry forest types in the Pacific Northwest, New Zealand, and northern Patagonia by comparing the fire traits of dominant taxa, postfire vegetation recovery, long-term climate trends, and human activities that may have motivated burning. Our analysis suggests that ecological and climatic factors explain much of the differences in how these mesic–dry forests responded to prehistoric anthropogenic burning. Understanding past human–environment interactions at regional scales is an important step for assessing the impact of biomass burning at all scales.
Keywords
  • Fire management,
  • Vegetation geography
Publication Date
2014
DOI
10.1093/biosci/biu194
Publisher Statement
© The Author(s) 2014. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Institute of Biological Sciences. All rights reserved.

This article benefitted from research supported by the WildFIRE PIRE project (National Science Foundation [NSF] grant OISE 0966472) and other NSF awards (grants GSS 0956552, BCS 1024413, and ATM 0714061), the Royal Society of New Zealand Marsden Fund, and Landcare Research Core funding.
Citation Information
Cathy Whitlock, David B. McWethy, Alan J. Tepley, Thomas T. Veblen, et al.. "Past and Present Vulnerability of Closed-Canopy Temperate Forests to Altered Fire Regimes: A Comparison of the Pacific Northwest, New Zealand, and Patagonia" BioScience (2014)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/andres-holz/4/