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Climate Change, Forests, Fire, Water, and Fish: Building resilient landscapes, streams, and managers

View of the publication here! 

Fire will play an important role in shaping forest and stream ecosystems as the climate changes. Historic observations show increased dryness accompanying more widespread fire and forest die-off. These events punctuate gradual changes to ecosystems and sometimes generate stepwise changes in ecosystems. Climate vulnerability assessments need to account for fire in their calculus. The biophysical template of forest and stream ecosystems determines much of their response to fire. This report describes the framework of how fire and climate change work together to affect forest and fish communities. Learning how to adapt will come from testing, probing, and pushing that framework and then proposing new ideas. The western U.S. defies generalizations, and much learning must necessarily be local in implication. This report serves as a scaffold for that learning. It comprises three primary chapters on physical processes, biological interactions, and management decisions, accompanied by a special section with separately authored papers addressing interactions of fish populations with wildfire.

Image Source: Environmental Protection Information Center

Posted by:
Gloria Edwards
Published on:
June 6, 2017

Categories: Technical ReportTags: Climate & Fire, climate change, climate change adaptation, Fire History, fire management, Forest Management, Forest Restoration, forests, stream sedimentation, Water Quality, watershed ecology, watershed impacts, watersheds, wildfire, Wildlife & Aquatic Ecosystems

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This regional Fire Exchange is one of 15 regional fire science exchanges sponsored by the Joint Fire Science Program (JFSP).
View resources from multiple exchanges.