2023
DOI: 10.1002/eap.2937
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Thresholds and alternative states in a Neotropical dry forest in response to fire severity

H. Raúl Peinetti,
Brandon T. Bestelmeyer,
Claudia C. Chirino
et al.

Abstract: Neotropical xerophytic forest ecosystems evolved with fires that shaped their resilience to disturbance events. However, it is unknown whether forest resilience to fires persists under a new fire regime influenced by anthropogenic disturbance and climate change. We asked whether there was evidence for a fire severity threshold causing an abrupt transition from a forest to an alternative shrub thicket state in the presence of typical postfire management. We studied a heterogeneous wildfire event to assess mediu… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…It is also important to use FR, the best measure of rates of fires [15], since FR measures the highly variable areas of fires and avoids earlier measures of rates of fire (e.g., mean fire-return intervals, composite fire intervals) that simply counted fires in small plots without measuring fire areas [15]. There is also considerable global concern about managing natural disturbances, particularly wildfires, in primary and native dry forests [32][33][34][35]. Disturbances are recognized as essential natural processes in forests.…”
Section: Management Implicationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is also important to use FR, the best measure of rates of fires [15], since FR measures the highly variable areas of fires and avoids earlier measures of rates of fire (e.g., mean fire-return intervals, composite fire intervals) that simply counted fires in small plots without measuring fire areas [15]. There is also considerable global concern about managing natural disturbances, particularly wildfires, in primary and native dry forests [32][33][34][35]. Disturbances are recognized as essential natural processes in forests.…”
Section: Management Implicationsmentioning
confidence: 99%