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Natural area managers use fire and grazing to achieve nature conservation/production goals and to prevent the loss of life and property. Yet, little i...
Read moreEpiphytic macrolichen lichens are important components of forest ecosystems, but their responses to stand-replacing fire and multiple successional pat...
Read moreTheories of plant succession are poorly developed in arid lands, hindering our understanding of how long communities may take to recover after disturb...
Read moreThe role of prescribed burning of vegetation to manage fire risk is controversial in a variety of situations worldwide. It is becoming more topical (i...
Read morePeatland restoration is essential to preserve biodiversity and carbon stored in peat soils. Common restoration techniques such as rewetting do not alw...
Read moreLandscape exposure to multiple stressors can pose risks to human health, biodiversity, and ecosystem services. Attempts to study, control, or mitigate...
Read moreUntil recently, scientific understanding of the history and ecology of the Pacific Northwest's mixed-conifer forests east of the Cascade Range was min...
Read moreThe importance of peatlands is being increasingly recognized internationally for both the conservation of biodiversity and the provision of ecosystem ...
Read moreMitigating impacts of global change on biodiversity is a pressing goal for land managers, but understanding impacts is often limited by the spatial an...
Read morePlanned burning generates different types of pyrodiversity, however, experimental tests of how alternative spatial patterns of burning influence anima...
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