4.4 Article

A tree-ring record of historical fire activity in a piedmont longleaf pine (Pinus palustris Mill.) woodland in North Carolina, USA

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

Linkages between forest growth, climate, and agricultural production are revealed through analysis of seasonally-partitioned longleaf pine (Pinus palustris Mill.) tree rings

Michael C. Stambaugh et al.

Summary: Through a five-century long tree-ring chronology, correlations were found between latewood growth and summer-fall drought index, providing a potential proxy for linking agricultural yields to climate change over multiple centuries.

DENDROCHRONOLOGIA (2021)

Article Forestry

A comparison of the climate response of longleaf pine (Pinus palustris Mill.) trees among standardized measures of earlywood, latewood, adjusted latewood, and totalwood radial growth

Peter T. Soule et al.

Summary: Longleaf pine radial growth is primarily controlled by late summer rainfall, with adjusted latewood growth showing the strongest relationship with climate. There is spatial similarity in growth/climate responses across the Coastal Plain region, while temporally, July-September precipitation has significant relationships with radial growth for extended periods. Growth/climate relationships are stronger for latewood compared to earlywood.

TREES-STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION (2021)

Article Forestry

burnr: Fire history analysis and graphics in R

Steven B. Malevich et al.

DENDROCHRONOLOGIA (2018)

Article Ecology

Predicting Fire Frequency with Chemistry and Climate

Richard P. Guyette et al.

ECOSYSTEMS (2012)

Review Ecology

Multi-scale controls of historical forest-fire regimes: new insights from fire-scar networks

Donald A. Falk et al.

FRONTIERS IN ECOLOGY AND THE ENVIRONMENT (2011)

Article Plant Sciences

Longleaf pine (Pinus palustris Mill.) fire scars reveal new details of a frequent fire regime

Michael C. Stambaugh et al.

JOURNAL OF VEGETATION SCIENCE (2011)

Review Plant Sciences

Fire as an evolutionary pressure shaping plant traits

Jon E. Keeley et al.

TRENDS IN PLANT SCIENCE (2011)