5 results on '"Zoe H. Schapira"'
Search Results
2. Author response for 'Rocky Mountain forests are poised to recover following bark beetle outbreaks, but with altered composition'
- Author
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null Kyle C. Rodman, null Robert A. Andrus, null Amanda R. Carlson, null Trevor A. Carter, null Teresa B. Chapman, null Jonathan D. Coop, null Paula J. Fornwalt, null Nathan S. Gill, null Brian J. Harvey, null Ashley E. Hoffman, null Katharine C. Kelsey, null Dominik Kulakowski, null Daniel C. Laughlin, null Jenna E. Morris, null José F. Negrón, null Katherine M. Nigro, null Gregory S. Pappas, null Miranda D. Redmond, null Charles C. Rhoades, null Monique E. Rocca, null Zoe H. Schapira, null Jason S. Sibold, null Camille S. Stevens‐Rumann, null Thomas T. Veblen, null Jianmin Wang, null Xiaoyang Zhang, and null Sarah J. Hart
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Microenvironment characteristics and early regeneration after the 2018 Spring Creek Wildfire and post-fire logging in Colorado, USA
- Author
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Jesse T. Wooten, Camille S. Stevens-Rumann, Zoe H. Schapira, and Monique E. Rocca
- Subjects
Forestry ,Environmental Science (miscellaneous) ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Background Wildfires are increasing in size and severity in forests of the western USA, driven by climate change and land management practices during the 20th century. Altered fire regimes have resulted in a greater need for knowledge on best practices for managing burned landscapes, especially in instances where a return to a previous forested ecosystem is desired. We examined a large wildfire from 2018 in southern Colorado to understand how fire severity and post-fire logging influenced stand structure, fuels, vegetation, and soil microsite conditions. Results Two years post-fire and 1 year post logging, there was no difference in understory vegetation response. Logged plots demonstrated lower daily average temperature and minimum soil moisture and higher fuel loading across most fuel size classes relative to unlogged plots, which also corresponded with a loss of dead standing wood and little to no canopy cover. Early post-fire conifer regeneration was low across all plots, but lower soil moisture and higher soil temperature negatively impacted the density of regeneration. Conclusions Successful tree regeneration is mediated by multiple factors from the microsite to landscape scale. Here, we demonstrate the importance of those microsite conditions such as soil moisture and temperature in predicting conifer tree establishment in the early post-fire period. Careful consideration of soil impacts and the associated changes to forest conditions should be taken when conducting post-fire logging to prevent detrimental effects on microsite conditions and forest recovery.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Subalpine tree seedlings: Assessing aging methodology and drivers of establishment
- Author
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Zoe H. Schapira, Donna Shorrock, and Camille S. Stevens-Rumann
- Subjects
biology ,Ecology ,Climate change ,Growing season ,Forestry ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,biology.organism_classification ,Disturbance (ecology) ,Picea engelmannii ,Seedling ,Threatened species ,Ecosystem ,Abies lasiocarpa ,Nature and Landscape Conservation - Abstract
The recent impacts of climate change have threatened the health and functioning of forested ecosystems on a global scale. Widespread tree mortality from altered disturbance regimes creates significant uncertainty about tree recovery in subalpine ecosystems. Aging seedlings is an important mechanism for understanding tree regeneration, and when paired with long-term climate, can provide critical information on climatic drivers of subalpine tree establishment. In this study, we destructively sampled and aged 229 Picea engelmannii (Engelmann spruce) and Abies lasiocarpa (subalpine fir) seedlings from beetle-affected and postfire subalpine stands in northern Colorado and southern Wyoming. We modeled the relationship between nondestructive aging methods and seedling age to assess the accuracy of age proxies in predicting true age of seedlings. We compared climatic conditions between years with high tree seedling establishment and non-establishment years to ascertain regional drivers of subalpine tree seedling recruitment. Both height and terminal bud scar counts were significant predictors of seedling age, although correlations were weaker in older seedlings that exhibited suppressed growth. Growing season precipitation had a significant positive relationship with spruce-fir establishment while minimum temperatures, annual vapor pressure and climatic water deficits had significant negative correlations with subalpine tree establishment. Height and terminal bud scar counts do not accurately predict precise ages of subalpine tree establishment from beetle-affected stands but provide more accuracy in postfire tree establishment. Average climate conditions compared to long-term climate may provide suitable conditions for low-levels of tree establishment in subalpine stands. However, large spruce-fir establishment pulses occur in cooler and wetter growing years compared to the long-term average, posing significant uncertainty about new seedling recruitment in a warming world.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Beetlemania: Is the bark worse than the bite? Rocky Mountain subalpine forests recover differently after spruce beetle outbreaks and wildfires
- Author
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Donna Shorrock, Chad M. Hoffman, Amy Chambers, Zoe H. Schapira, and Camille S. Stevens-Rumann
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Pinus contorta ,Forest floor ,Bark beetle ,biology ,Dendroctonus rufipennis ,Ecology ,Forestry ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,biology.organism_classification ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Basal area ,Disturbance (ecology) ,Picea engelmannii ,Environmental science ,010606 plant biology & botany ,Nature and Landscape Conservation ,Subalpine forest - Abstract
Due to the shifting global climate, the frequency and severity of disturbances are increasing, inevitably causing an increase in disturbances overlapping in time and space. Bark beetle epidemics and wildfires have historically shaped the disturbance regimes of Western North American forests. Their interactive effects on stand dynamics and recovery are inadequately studied in Picea engelmannii (Engelmann spruce)-Abies lasiocarpa (subalpine fir) dominant forests; understanding these interactions is imperative to the management and health of forested ecosystems. This study focuses on the effects of epidemic Dendroctonus rufipennis (spruce beetle) outbreaks, high-severity fires, and the subsequent species and structural diversity of subalpine forest regeneration and structure in Northern Colorado and Southern Wyoming. We compared tree seedling densities and species composition, surface fuel loading, and stand structure characteristics across 80 sites that experienced either high tree mortality from epidemic spruce beetle outbreaks (>50% affected basal area), high-severity wildfire, post-outbreak high-severity wildfire (1–3 years post-outbreak), or no disturbance (control). The beetle outbreak sites span multiple years post-outbreak from 1996 to 2017, ultimately comprising a chronosequence of beetle-affected stands. Analyses indicate a significant increase in fuel loading over time-since-outbreak, as aerial fuels are transferred to the forest floor following high tree mortality. Tree seedling densities among outbreak and control sites differ significantly from burned areas, indicating that wildfires override the effects of repeated disturbances on regeneration. There was consistent Engelmann spruce seedling survival following beetle outbreaks, providing evidence for stable forest recovery following a single disturbance. However, fire was a dominate force in determining post-disturbance species composition, indicating continued prevalence of high severity fire may prove detrimental for the persistence of spruce-fir species, while promoting shifts toward more drought and fire tolerant tree species (e.g., Pinus contorta). It is critical to understand post-disturbance fuel dynamics and stand recovery to identify hazards for subsequent fire suppression, implement treatments to enhance forest resilience, and to understand the potential consequences of climate-induced shifts in disturbance regimes on forest health.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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