A Different Perspective on Global Fire: USGS Research Brief

This article argues that fire is more akin to trophic processes such as herbivory, and that there has been a reluctance by ecologists to incorporate the process of fire into general theories of community development and assembly. 
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A Decision Framework for Fire as a Restoration Tool: Research Brief

This journal article provides a decision framework that integrates fire regime components, plant growth form, and survival attributes to predict how plants will respond to fires and how fires can be prescribed to enhance the likelihood of obtaining desired plant responses. 
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10-Year Small Mammal Use on a Chaparral Fire Edge: Research Brief

From 2002  to 2011,  Sinead and Mark Borchert live-trapped small mammals in two grids across the 65­‐m zone on either side of the perimeter of the 2002, 8,100‐ha Wolf Fire in Los Padres National Forest.  
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A Tale of Two Fire Syndromes: Recruiters vs. Resisters: Research Brief

Chaparral  species  can  be  sorted  into  two   life  history  types:  those  with  dormant  seed   banks  that  germinate  after  fire  and  those   with  very  short-­‐lived  seeds  and these   species survive  fire  by  resprouting.

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A Shifting Mosaic of Grasslands and Shrublands: Research Brief

To  better  understand  vegetation  succession  in  the   Los  Angeles,  California  basin,  modern  aerial   photos  (1980)  were  measured  and  compared  to   older  aerial  photos  (1928  &  1936),  spanning   roughly  50  years  of  vegetation  change.  Through   this  comparison,  the  authors  found  that shrublands  and  grasslands  formed  a  dynamic   mosaic. 
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Fire-Driven Alien Plant Invasion in a Fire-Prone Community: USGS Research Brief

This study showed that fire-adapted shrublands are vulnerable to changes in fire regime, leading to loss of native diversity and setting the community on a trajectory towards type conversion from a woody to an herbaceous system. 

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Prescribed fires do not reduce future area burned in central and southern California: USGS Research Brief

Researchers used 29 years of historical fire mapping to quantify the relationship between annual wildfire area and previous fire area in seven California counties to address the question of prescribed fire effectiveness in these counties. 
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The Built Environment Is More Influential Than Fuel Breaks in Exposure to Wind-Driven Chaparral Fire: USGS Research Brief

A Bayesian Network model was used to evaluate the relative importance of fuel and fuel treatments compared to weather and variables of the built and natural environment on wildfire risk at the wildland-urban interface (WUI) in San Diego County. 
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Resource Objective Wildfires Benefit Forests: Research Brief

A 2015 study by Meyer showed that the natural range of variation (NRV) concept and key fire severity indicators could be used to quantitatively evaluate the landscape-scale effects of large wildfires managed for resource objectives.
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