2019
DOI: 10.1139/cjfr-2018-0278
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Analyzing risk of regeneration failure in the managed boreal forest of northwestern Quebec

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Cited by 47 publications
(46 citation statements)
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“…The role of severe drought in both the occurrence of short-interval reburning 6,7 , and the post-fire outcomes for juvenile trees 23,24,39 suggests that climate change will have multiple direct effects on the structure and composition northwestern boreal forests as repeated wildfires and drought interact, although more research is needed to understand this relationship. The piecemeal occurrence of short-interval reburns in interaction with drought may serve to accelerate widespread climate-driven changes in forest openness and composition, that are projected and ongoing in much of the boreal forest 45,61,62 .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The role of severe drought in both the occurrence of short-interval reburning 6,7 , and the post-fire outcomes for juvenile trees 23,24,39 suggests that climate change will have multiple direct effects on the structure and composition northwestern boreal forests as repeated wildfires and drought interact, although more research is needed to understand this relationship. The piecemeal occurrence of short-interval reburns in interaction with drought may serve to accelerate widespread climate-driven changes in forest openness and composition, that are projected and ongoing in much of the boreal forest 45,61,62 .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Interactions with climate, mediated through drought, appear to amplify the effects of shortened fire intervals that cause species composition shifts and increase forest openness, suggesting that modelled rates of compositional change and regeneration failure driven by fire frequency (e.g. 15,62 ), but not drought, may be conservative. If the frequency and extent of short-interval reburning in the northwestern boreal forest increases with future climate change it is likely to accelerate and reinforce climate-driven shifts towards open forests with a reduced conifer dominance as forests’ adaptive resilience to disturbance is overwhelmed.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Today, dry sandy areas in Canadian boreal forests mainly host P. banksiana and P. mariana in the canopy and ericaceous or ground lichens in the understory. Pinus abundance is controlled by fires (Johnson 1992 ) but is generally excluded by intervals of stand-replacing fire longer than 200 years, while P. mariana is excluded by intervals shorter than 60 years (Desponts and Payette 1992 ; Le Goff and Sirois 2004 ; Splawinski and others 2019 ). Temporary modification of the canopy from P. banksiana -dominant to Picea dominant during the last 6000 years would thus show a loss of autocorrelation over a period of 500 to 1000 years.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Extreme fires in the past decade have raised concerns that the ecological resilience of (Girard et al 2009(Girard et al , 2011Whitman et al 2018bWhitman et al , 2019. The probability of post-fire tree regeneration failure is expected to increase across forests types in the future with the projected increase in fire activity, warm temperatures, and drought (Whitman et al 2018b;Splawinski et al 2019;Boucher et al 2020).…”
Section: Fire and Forest Dynamicsmentioning
confidence: 99%