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Displaying 1 - 20 of 1822

Scientists have spent decades trying to understand how to best promote resilient forests and reduce fuels. A golden endeavor certainly. Is the best approach using a series of prescribed burns? Or is it mechanically cutting trees? Or does the…
Author(s): Kirsten Healey, Sharon M. Hood, Justin S. Crotteau, Cory Cleveland
Year Published:

Increased understanding of how mechanical thinning, prescribed burning, and wildfire affect subsequent wildfire severity is urgently needed as people and forests face a growing wildfire crisis. In response, we reviewed scientific literature for the…
Author(s): Kimberly T. Davis, Jamie L. Peeler, Joseph E Fargione, Ryan D. Haugo, Kerry L. Metlen, Marcos D. Robles, Travis J. Woolley
Year Published:

Background: Spot fires play a significant role in the rapid spread of wildland and wildland–urban interface fires. Aims: This paper presents an experimental and modelling study on the flaming and smouldering burning of wood firebrands under forced…
Author(s): Weidong Yan, Naian Liu, Hong Zhu, Haixiang Chen, Xiaodong Xie, Wei Gao, Zhihao Du
Year Published:

Background Linear fuel breaks are being implemented to moderate fire behavior and improve wildfire containment in semiarid landscapes such as the sagebrush steppe of North America, where extensive losses in perennial vegetation and ecosystem…
Author(s): Matthew J. Germino, Samuel Price, Susan J. Prichard
Year Published:

Background: Sagebrush ecosystems are experiencing increases in wildfire extent and severity. Most research on vegetation treatments that reduce fuels and fire risk has been short term (2–3 years) and focused on ecological responses. We review…
Author(s): Jeanne C. Chambers, Eva K. Strand, Lisa M. Ellsworth, Claire Tortorelli, Alexandra K. Urza, Michele R. Crist, Richard F. Miller, Matthew C. Reeves, Karen C. Short, Claire Williams
Year Published:

Wildfire causes environmental, economic, and human problems or losses. This study reviewed wildfires induced by lightning strikes. This review focuses on the investigations of lightning mechanisms in the laboratory. Also, the paper aims to discuss…
Author(s): Yang Song, Cangsu Xu, Xiaolu Li, Francis Oppong
Year Published:

Background: Accurate estimates of available live crown fuel loads are critical for understanding potential wildland fire behavior. Existing crown fire behavior models assume that available crown fuels are limited to all tree foliage and half of the…
Author(s): Elliot T. Conrad, William Matt Jolly, Tegan P. Brown, Samuel Hillman
Year Published:

Background: Climate change is a strong contributing factor in the lengthening and intensification of wildfire seasons, with warmer and often drier conditions associated with increasingly severe impacts. Land managers are faced with challenging…
Author(s): Haley K. Skinner, Susan J. Prichard, Alison Cullen
Year Published:

Fire is an important component of many forest ecosystems, yet climate change is now modifying fire regimes all over the world, driving a need to understand the impact of fires on the physical and biological processes. In 2022, Elsevier launched a…
Author(s): Liubov Volkova, María Elena Fernández
Year Published:

Background There is an ongoing need for improved understanding of wildfire plume dynamics. Aims To improve process-level understanding of wildfire plume dynamics including strong (>10 m s−1) fire-generated winds and pyrocumulus (pyroCu)…
Author(s): Neil P. Lareau, Craig B. Clements, Adam K. Kochanski, Taylor Aydell, Andrew T. Hudak, T. Ryan McCarley, Roger D. Ottmar
Year Published:

Our objective in the present study is to provide basic insights into the coupling between external-gas and solid biomass vegetation processes that control the dynamics of flame spread in wildland fire problems. We focus on a modeling approach that…
Author(s): Mohamed Mohsen Ahmed, Arnaud Trouve, Jason M. Forthofer, Mark A. Finney
Year Published:

Background Euro–Mediterranean regions are expected to undergo a climate-induced exacerbation of fire activity in the upcoming decades. Reliable predictions of fire behaviour represent an essential instrument for planning and optimising fire…
Author(s): Debora Voltolina, Giacomo Cappellini, Tiziana Apuani, Simone Sterlacchini
Year Published:

We find that wildfire are part of a distinct temporal pattern of soil moisture, vegetation water content and atmospheric dryness dynamics that begin about 5 months before the incidents. We analyze anomalies in soil moisture, vegetation water…
Author(s): Mohammad Reza Alizadeha, Jan F. Adamowski, Dara Entekhabi
Year Published:

Background Wildfire is a major proximate cause of historical and ongoing losses of intact big sagebrush (Artemisia tridentata Nutt.) plant communities and declines in sagebrush obligate wildlife species. In recent decades, fire return intervals have…
Author(s): Martin C. Holdrege, Daniel Schlaepfer, Kyle Palmquist, Michele R. Crist, Kevin E. Doherty, William Lauenroth, Thomas E. Remington, Karin Riley, Karen C. Short, John C. Tull, Lief A. Wiechman, John B. Bradford
Year Published:

Extreme wildfire is an increasing threat to lives, property, and ecosystems across the United States and many parts of the world. Family forest owners (FFOs) own a large percentage of forestland in the United States, and actions and behaviors on…
Author(s): Sarah M. Butler, Brett J. Butler, Emma M. Sass
Year Published:

Background: As fire regimes are changing and wildfire disasters are becoming more frequent, the term megafire is increasingly used to describe impactful wildfires, under multiple meanings, both in academia and popular media. This has resulted in a…
Author(s): Cathelijine Stoof, Jasper R. de Vries, Marc Castellnou Ribau, María Fernandez-Fernandez, David Flores, Julissa Galarza Villamar, Nick Kettridge, Desmond Lartey, Peter F. Moore, Fiona Newman-Thacker, Susan J. Prichard, Pepijn Tersmette, Sam Tuijtel, Ivo Verhaar, Paulo M. Fernandes
Year Published:

Trees use nonstructural carbohydrates (NSCs) to support many functions, including recovery from disturbances. However, NSC’s importance for recovery following fire and whether NSC depletion contributes to post-fire delayed mortality are largely…
Author(s): Charlotte C. Reed, Sharon M. Hood
Year Published:

Piñon–juniper (PJ) woodlands are a dominant community type across the Intermountain West, comprising over a million acres and experiencing critical effects from increasing wildfire. Large PJ mortality and regeneration failure after catastrophic…
Author(s): Michala Phillips, Cara Lauria, Tova Spector, John B. Bradford, Catherine A. Gehring, Brooke B. Osborne, Armin Howell, Edmund E. Grote, Renee J. Rondeau, Gillian M. Trimber, Ben A. Robinson, Sasha C. Reed
Year Published:

Quaking aspen (Populus tremuloides Michx.) stands throughout the western United States provide valuable ecosystem services but can be lost via succession from aspen to conifer. Forest managers are cutting conifers, but disposal of cut wood can be…
Author(s): John-Pascal Berrill, Christa M. Dagley, Yoon G. Kim, J. Morgan Varner
Year Published:

Comprehensive pyrolysis models describe solid phase reaction rates with respect to the material temperature and the concentrations of components. In theory, this aspect of comprehensive pyrolysis models allows for true predictive capabilities for…
Author(s): Mark B. McKinnon, Holli Knight
Year Published: