2013
DOI: 10.1071/wfv22n1_fo
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Advances in understanding and managing wildland fire: communicating wildland fire research to land-management practitioners

Abstract: Abstract. The health and function of forest ecosystems throughout the world include periodic exposure to disturbances such as fire. Fire has been instrumental in the evolution of large segments of flora and fauna and in preventing fuel accumulations that resulted in extreme fire behaviour and ecosystem degradation. However, wildland fuels have been accumulating over several of the past decades because of suppression-orientated wildland fire policies, silvicultural and grazing practices, invasions of invasive s… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Then, five post-treatment simulation runs were carried out by setting the thinning/prescribed burn treatment to the top 10, 20, 30, 40, and 50 percent of the sediment generating hillslopes. For this study, model simulations applied the two most common forest fuel managements for reducing the risk of wildfire (McIver et al, 2013;Mickler et al, 2013;Agee and Skinner, 2005). This study aimed to evaluate the combined effects of thinning and prescribed burns to reduce stand density and dead fuels accumulated on the ground.…”
Section: Identification and Prioritization Of Critical Hillslopesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Then, five post-treatment simulation runs were carried out by setting the thinning/prescribed burn treatment to the top 10, 20, 30, 40, and 50 percent of the sediment generating hillslopes. For this study, model simulations applied the two most common forest fuel managements for reducing the risk of wildfire (McIver et al, 2013;Mickler et al, 2013;Agee and Skinner, 2005). This study aimed to evaluate the combined effects of thinning and prescribed burns to reduce stand density and dead fuels accumulated on the ground.…”
Section: Identification and Prioritization Of Critical Hillslopesmentioning
confidence: 99%