ETD PDF

Sustainability of Historic Wildfire Refugia in Contemporary Wildfire Events

Citation

Bleeker, Tyler Mark. (2015). Sustainability of Historic Wildfire Refugia in Contemporary Wildfire Events. Theses and Dissertations Collection, University of Idaho Library Digital Collections. https://www.lib.uidaho.edu/digital/etd/items/bleeker_idaho_0089n_10537.html

Title:
Sustainability of Historic Wildfire Refugia in Contemporary Wildfire Events
Author:
Bleeker, Tyler Mark
Date:
2015
Keywords:
burn severity historical range of variability refugia spatial heterogeneity state-and-transition wildfire
Program:
Geography
Subject Category:
Ecology; Environmental science; Environmental management
Abstract:

In fire-adapted forest ecosystems, spatial heterogeneity of fire effects is essential to maintaining overall species and habitat diversity across the landscape. Forest patches that are minimally-affected by wildfire without transitioning into a different successional state (termed `refugia') maintain critical habitat for fire-sensitive species. Due to fire suppression and climate change, historically-persistent wildfire refugia may be vulnerable to loss. We investigated historically-persistent wildfire refugia and surrounding non-refugial matrix classified by Camp et al. (1997) after fires burned through the original study area in 2012 under extreme weather conditions. We found that previously classified historic wildfire refugia experienced greater fire effects than the non-refugial matrix, yet the majority of sampled forest stands persisted in the pre-fire successional state. This result demonstrates that individual wildfire refugia may not be persistent through time indefinitely, but that some patches persist as refugia within a fire area even during extreme wildfires.

Description:
masters, M.S., Geography -- University of Idaho - College of Graduate Studies, 2015
Major Professor:
Kolden, Crystal A
Committee:
Camp, Ann E; Smith, Alistair MS
Defense Date:
2015
Identifier:
Bleeker_idaho_0089N_10537
Type:
Text
Format Original:
PDF
Format:
application/pdf

Contact us about this record

Rights
Rights:
In Copyright - Educational Use Permitted. For more information, please contact University of Idaho Library Special Collections and Archives Department at libspec@uidaho.edu.
Standardized Rights:
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/