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Author(s):
Ann Camp, Chad Oliver, Paul F. Hessburg, Richard L. Everett
Year Published:

Cataloging Information

Topic(s):
Fire History

NRFSN number: 18515
Record updated:

Fires occur frequently in dry forests of the Inland West. Fire effects vary across the landscape, reflecting topography, elevation, aspect, slope, soils, and vegetation attributes. Patches minimally affected by successive fires may be thought of as ‘refugia’, islands of older forest in a younger forest matrix. Refugia support species absent within the landscape matrix. Our goal was to predict the occurrence of pre-settlement refugia using physiographic and topographic variables.

We evaluated 487 plots across a 47000 ha landscape using three criteria to identify historical fire refugia: different structure from surrounding matrix; different fire regime from surrounding matrix; presence of old individuals of fire-intolerant tree species. Several combinations of aspect, elevation, and topography best predicted refugial presence.

Less than 20% of the pre-settlement landscape was identified as historical fire refugia. Refugia were not connected except by younger stands within the matrix. Current management goals of increasing amounts and connectivity of old, refugia-like forests for the benefit of species associated with late-successional habitat increase the risk of insect and pathogen outbreaks and catastrophic wildfires.

Citation

Camp A, Oliver P, Hessburg P, and Everett R. 1997. Predicting late-successional fire refugio pre-dating European settlement in the Wenatchee Mountains. Forest Ecology and Management 95 (1): 63-77. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0378-1127(97)00006-6

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