4.7 Article

ECOSTRESS reveals pre-fire vegetation controls on burn severity for Southern California wildfires of 2020

相关参考文献

注意:仅列出部分参考文献,下载原文获取全部文献信息。
Article Forestry

Previous wildfires and management treatments moderate subsequent fire severity

Alina Cansler et al.

Summary: This study in northeastern Washington State, USA, analyzed 150 fires occurring from 2001 to 2019 in conifer forests, and found that daily fire weather, annual precipitation anomalies, and species' fire resistance traits were important predictors of wildfire burn severity. Previous fires within the past two to three decades reduced the severity of subsequent burns, while prescribed burning was the most effective treatment at lowering subsequent burn severity. Overall, postfire management actions had a weak influence on the severity of subsequent fires, highlighting the importance of stabilizing feedbacks in active fire regimes.

FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT (2022)

Article Ecology

Strong Legacy Effects of Prior Burn Severity on Forest Resilience to a High-Severity Fire

Lucas B. Harris et al.

Summary: Legacy effects from a 1984 wildfire influenced post-2012 tree regeneration by creating variable fuel loading, affecting soils, litter cover, and shade after the subsequent fire. A low- to moderate-severity fire increases forest resilience relative to a high-severity fire even when the next fire burns at high severity.

ECOSYSTEMS (2021)

Article Ecology

Recent bark beetle outbreaks influence wildfire severity in mixed-conifer forests of the Sierra Nevada, California, USA

Rebecca B. Wayman et al.

Summary: The study found that in mixed-conifer forests in California's Sierra Nevada, there is a relationship between wildfire severity and severity of prefire tree mortality, and this relationship may vary under different weather conditions.

ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS (2021)

Article Environmental Sciences

Interoperability of ECOSTRESS and Landsat for mapping evapotranspiration time series at sub-field scales

Martha C. Anderson et al.

Summary: This study explores the combination of Landsat and ECOSTRESS imaging for high-resolution ET image timeseries, demonstrating the value of ECOSTRESS's higher temporal sampling and discussing challenges in using land-surface temperature for ET retrieval.

REMOTE SENSING OF ENVIRONMENT (2021)

Article Environmental Sciences

An evaluation of ECOSTRESS products of a temperate montane humid forest in a complex terrain environment

Ning Liu et al.

Summary: Evaluation of ECOSTRESS data shows differences between remotely-sensed inputs and ground-based data, indicating potential errors in areas of complex terrain. This study provides insights into the performance of ECOSTRESS in forested ecosystems and highlights the need for further evaluation in diverse environmental settings.

REMOTE SENSING OF ENVIRONMENT (2021)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Wildfire response to changing daily temperature extremes in California's Sierra Nevada

Aurora A. Gutierrez et al.

Summary: The study shows that the likelihood of fire occurrence and burned area in the Sierra Nevada range increases nonlinearly with daily temperature during summer. A 1 degrees C increase in temperature leads to a 19 to 22% increase in fire risk and a 22 to 25% increase in burned area risk. Climate model projections suggest that by the 2040s, fire numbers will increase by 51 +/- 32% and burned area will increase by 59 +/- 33%, emphasizing the threat posed by hotter and drier summers to fire management.

SCIENCE ADVANCES (2021)

Article Ecology

Wildfire severity and vegetation recovery drive post-fire evapotranspiration in a southwestern pine-oak forest, Arizona, USA

Helen M. Poulos et al.

Summary: Post-fire vegetation matrix and fire severity can influence the variation in evapotranspiration, with higher ET levels found in shrublands burned at high severity. Plant functional traits such as resprouting and desiccation tolerance play critical roles in shaping post-fire plant communities and forest water cycling.

REMOTE SENSING IN ECOLOGY AND CONSERVATION (2021)

Article Ecology

Drivers of fire severity shift as landscapes transition to an active fire regime, Klamath Mountains, USA

Alan H. Taylor et al.

Summary: Fire severity patterns are influenced by interactions between fire, vegetation, and terrain, creating legacy effects that impact future fire severity. Recent increases in burned area and high severity burns suggest a transition back to an active fire regime, where disturbance legacies will play a significant role. Understanding the drivers of fire severity is crucial for predicting future patterns and establishing fire resilience in landscapes transitioning to an active fire regime.

ECOSPHERE (2021)

Article Environmental Sciences

Detecting tree mortality with Landsat-derived spectral indices: Improving ecological accuracy by examining uncertainty

Tucker J. Furniss et al.

REMOTE SENSING OF ENVIRONMENT (2020)

Article Environmental Sciences

ECOSTRESS: NASA's Next Generation Mission to Measure Evapotranspiration From the International Space Station

Joshua B. Fisher et al.

WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH (2020)

Article Environmental Sciences

Intensified burn severity in California's northern coastal mountains by drier climatic condition

Yuhan Huang et al.

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS (2020)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Wildfires and climate change push low-elevation forests across a critical climate threshold for tree regeneration

Kimberley T. Davis et al.

PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA (2019)

Article Ecology

Deconstructing the King megafire

Janice L. Coen et al.

ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS (2018)

Article Environmental Sciences

The sensitivity of US wildfire occurrence to pre-season soil moisture conditions across ecosystems

Daniel Jensen et al.

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS (2018)

Article Forestry

Water balance and topography predict fire and forest structure patterns

Van R. Kane et al.

FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT (2015)

Article Geosciences, Multidisciplinary

Large wildfire trends in the western United States, 1984-2011

Philip E. Dennison et al.

GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS (2014)

Article Forestry

Climate and very large wildland fires in the contiguous western USA

E. Natasha Stavros et al.

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF WILDLAND FIRE (2014)

Article Geosciences, Multidisciplinary

Precipitation dominates fire occurrence in Greece (1900-2010): its dual role in fuel build-up and dryness

F. Xystrakis et al.

NATURAL HAZARDS AND EARTH SYSTEM SCIENCES (2014)

Article Geography, Physical

Sensitivity of spectral reflectance values to different burn and vegetation ratios: A multi-scale approach applied in a fire affected area

Magdalini Pleniou et al.

ISPRS JOURNAL OF PHOTOGRAMMETRY AND REMOTE SENSING (2013)

Article Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences

Examining Rapid Onset Drought Development Using the Thermal Infrared-Based Evaporative Stress Index

Jason A. Otkin et al.

JOURNAL OF HYDROMETEOROLOGY (2013)

Article Environmental Sciences

Temperature as a potent driver of regional forest drought stress and tree mortality

A. Park Williams et al.

NATURE CLIMATE CHANGE (2013)

Review Forestry

Effects of bark beetle-caused tree mortality on wildfire

Jeffrey A. Hicke et al.

FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT (2012)

Review Ecology

ET come home: potential evapotranspiration in geographical ecology

Joshua B. Fisher et al.

GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY (2011)

Review Forestry

Fire intensity, fire severity and burn severity: a brief review and suggested usage

Jon E. Keeley

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF WILDLAND FIRE (2009)

Article Geosciences, Multidisciplinary

Fire season precipitation variability influences fire extent and severity in a large southwestern wilderness area, United States

Zachary A. Holden et al.

GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS (2007)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Warming and earlier spring increase western US forest wildfire activity

A. L. Westerling et al.

SCIENCE (2006)

Article Computer Science, Artificial Intelligence

Random forests

L Breiman

MACHINE LEARNING (2001)