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Wildfire and climate change adaptation of western North American forests
by
Prichard, Susan J.
, Hessburg, Paul F.
, Povak, Nicholas A.
, Hagmann, R. Keala
, Lake, Frank K.
in
Burning
/ Climate adaptation
/ Climate Change
/ Climate Change and Western Wildfires
/ climate warming
/ Fires
/ forest landscape changes
/ Forest management
/ Forests
/ Global warming
/ Indigenous fire use
/ Insects
/ INVITED FEATURE: CLIMATE CHANGE AND WESTERN WILDFIRES
/ issues and policy
/ Landscape
/ landscape realignment
/ landscape resilience
/ landscape resistance
/ landscapes
/ lightning
/ mortality
/ North America
/ Paralysis
/ Precautionary principle
/ social‐ecological systems
/ Trees
/ uncertainty
/ wildfire regime changes
/ Wildfires
2021
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Wildfire and climate change adaptation of western North American forests
by
Prichard, Susan J.
, Hessburg, Paul F.
, Povak, Nicholas A.
, Hagmann, R. Keala
, Lake, Frank K.
in
Burning
/ Climate adaptation
/ Climate Change
/ Climate Change and Western Wildfires
/ climate warming
/ Fires
/ forest landscape changes
/ Forest management
/ Forests
/ Global warming
/ Indigenous fire use
/ Insects
/ INVITED FEATURE: CLIMATE CHANGE AND WESTERN WILDFIRES
/ issues and policy
/ Landscape
/ landscape realignment
/ landscape resilience
/ landscape resistance
/ landscapes
/ lightning
/ mortality
/ North America
/ Paralysis
/ Precautionary principle
/ social‐ecological systems
/ Trees
/ uncertainty
/ wildfire regime changes
/ Wildfires
2021
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Do you wish to request the book?
Wildfire and climate change adaptation of western North American forests
by
Prichard, Susan J.
, Hessburg, Paul F.
, Povak, Nicholas A.
, Hagmann, R. Keala
, Lake, Frank K.
in
Burning
/ Climate adaptation
/ Climate Change
/ Climate Change and Western Wildfires
/ climate warming
/ Fires
/ forest landscape changes
/ Forest management
/ Forests
/ Global warming
/ Indigenous fire use
/ Insects
/ INVITED FEATURE: CLIMATE CHANGE AND WESTERN WILDFIRES
/ issues and policy
/ Landscape
/ landscape realignment
/ landscape resilience
/ landscape resistance
/ landscapes
/ lightning
/ mortality
/ North America
/ Paralysis
/ Precautionary principle
/ social‐ecological systems
/ Trees
/ uncertainty
/ wildfire regime changes
/ Wildfires
2021
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Wildfire and climate change adaptation of western North American forests
Journal Article
Wildfire and climate change adaptation of western North American forests
2021
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Overview
Forest landscapes across western North America (wNA) have experienced extensive changes over the last two centuries, while climatic warming has become a global reality over the last four decades. Resulting interactions between historical increases in forested area and density and recent rapid warming, increasing insect mortality, and wildfire burned areas, are now leading to substantial abrupt landscape alterations. These outcomes are forcing forest planners and managers to identify strategies that can modify future outcomes that are ecologically and/or socially undesirable. Past forest management, including widespread harvest of fire- and climate-tolerant large old trees and old forests, fire exclusion (both Indigenous and lightning ignitions), and highly effective wildfire suppression have contributed to the current state of wNA forests. These practices were successful at meeting short-term demands, but they match poorly to modern realities. Hagmann et al. review a century of observations and multiscale, multi-proxy, research evidence that details widespread changes in forested landscapes and wildfire regimes since the influx of European colonists. Over the preceding 10 millennia, large areas of wNA were already settled and proactively managed with intentional burning by Indigenous tribes. Prichard et al. then review the research on management practices historically applied by Indigenous tribes and currently applied by some managers to intentionally manage forests for resilient conditions. They address 10 questions surrounding the application and relevance of these management practices. Here, we highlight the main findings of both papers and offer recommendations for management. We discuss progress paralysis that often occurs with strict adherence to the precautionary principle; offer insights for dealing with the common problem of irreducible uncertainty and suggestions for reframing management and policy direction; and identify key knowledge gaps and research needs.
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons, Inc,Ecological Society of America,John Wiley and Sons Inc
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