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post-fire

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Woodpecker Habitat After the Fire

Year of Publication
2011
Publication Type

Public land managers are asked to minimize fuel levels after fires, including using techniques such as salvage logging. They are also responsible for maintaining suitable wildlife habitat, especially for species of concern to state and federal agencies.

Vegetation recovery after fire in the Klamath-Siskiyou region, southern Oregon

Year of Publication
2011
Publication Type

This overview is intended to facilitate decisions regarding forest regeneration in the Klamath-Siskiyou Ecoregion. It summarizes the results of several scientific investigations that took place in the ecoregion. Some of the research occurred in areas without post-fire management, and other research occurred in moderately or intensively managed areas.

Nontribal community recovery from wildfire five years later: The case of the Rodeo-Chediski fire

Year of Publication
2011
Publication Type

Recent literature suggests that natural disasters such as wildfires often have the short-term effect of ‘‘bringing people together’’ while also under some circumstances generating social conflict at the local level. Conflict has been documented particularly when social relations are disembedded by nonlocal entities and there is a perceived loss of local agency.

The fire pulse: wildfire stimulates flux of aquatic prey to terrestrial habitats driving increase in riparian consumers

Year of Publication
2010
Publication Type

We investigated the midterm effects of wildfire (in this case, five years after the fire) of varying severity on periphyton, benthic invertebrates, emerging adult aquatic insects, spiders, and bats by comparing unburned sites with those exposed to low severity (riparian vegetation burned but canopy intact) and high severity (canopy completely removed) wildfire.

Prescribed fires as ecological surrogates for wildfires: A stream and riparian perspective

Year of Publication
2010
Publication Type

Forest managers use prescribed fire to reduce wildfire risk and to provide resource benefits, yet little information is available on whether prescribed fires can function as ecological surrogates for wildfire in fire-prone landscapes. Information on impacts and benefits of this management tool on stream and riparian ecosystems is particularly lacking.