1. Interactions Among Wildland Fires in a Long-Established Sierra Nevada Natural Fire Area
- Author
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Andrea E. Thode, Jan W. van Wagtendonk, Jay D. Miller, Scott L. Stephens, Brandon M. Collins, and Maggi Kelly
- Subjects
Wildfire suppression ,Ecology ,Fire regime ,Elevation ,Natural (archaeology) ,Fire weather ,Escape fire ,Environmental protection ,Environmental Chemistry ,Environmental science ,Ecosystem ,Physical geography ,Fire ecology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
We investigate interactions between successive naturally occurring fires, and assess to what extent the environments in which fires burn influence these interactions. Using mapped fire perimeters and satellite-based estimates of post-fire effects (referred to hereafter as fire severity) for 19 fires burning relatively freely over a 31-year period, we demonstrate that fire as a landscape process can exhibit self-limiting characteristics in an upper elevation Sierra Nevada mixed conifer forest. We use the term ‘self-limiting’ to refer to recurring fire as a process over time (that is, fire regime) consuming fuel and ultimately constraining the spatial extent and lessening fire-induced effects of subsequent fires. When the amount of time between successive adjacent fires is under 9 years, and when fire weather is not extreme (burning index
- Published
- 2008
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