Jump to the main content of this page
![]() |
||||||||||||||||||
![]() |
![]() |
Pacific Southwest Research Station |
||||||||||||||||
![]() |
![]() |
|||||||||||||||||
Pacific Southwest
Research Station 1731 Research Park Dr. Davis, CA 95618 (530) 759-1700 ![]() |
Publications and Products![]() General Technical ReportTitle: Restoring fire-adapted ecosystems: proceedings of the 2005 national silviculture workshop Author: Powers, Robert F., tech. editor. Date: 2007 Source: Gen. Tech. Rep. PSW-GTR-203, Albany, CA: Pacific Southwest Research Station, Forest Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture. 306 p Station ID: GTR-PSW-203 Description: Many federal forests are at risk to catastrophic wild fire owing to past management practices and policies. Mangers of these forests face the immense challenge of making their forests resilient to wild fire, and the problem is complicated by the specter of climate change that may affect wild fire frequency and intensity. Some of the Nation’s leading scientists and practitioner present approaches in tackling the problem. Key Words: wild fire, fuel management, thinning, climate change, fire history, resilience Historical and Future Trends Management Strategies Stewardship and fireshed assessment: a process for designing a landscape fuel treatment strategy 244 KB
Bernhard Bahro, Klaus H. Barber, Joseph W. Sherlock, and Donald A. Yasuda Reintroducing fire to oak forests of Pennsylvania: response of striped maple 260 KB
Patrick H. Brose, Gary W. Miller, and Kurt W. Gottschalk Reintroducing fire in regenerated dry forests following stand-replacing wildfire 1.1 MB
David W. Peterson, Paul F. Hessburg, Brion Salter, Kevin M. James, Matthew C. Dahlgreen, and John A. Barnes Silvicultural Options Silviculture for the 21st century—objective and subjective standards to guide successful practice 224 KB
James M. Guldin and Russell T. Graham Free selection: a silvicultural option 1.6 MB
Russell T. Graham, Theresa B. Jain, and Jonathan Sandquist SDI-Flex: a new technique of allocating growing stock for developing treatment prescriptions in uneven-aged stands 908 KB
Wayne D. Shepperd Gap-based silviculture in a Sierran mixed-conifer forest: effects of gap size on early survival and 7-year seedling growth 280 KB
Robert A. York, John J. Battles, and Robert C. Heald Effects of alternative treatments on canopy fuel characteristics in five conifer stands 2.5 MB
Joe H. Scott and Elizabeth D. Reinhardt Risks and Impacts The relation between tree burn severity and forest structure in the Rocky Mountains 804 KB
Theresa B. Jain and Russell T. Graham Fire performance in traditional silvicultural and fire and fire surrogate treatments in Sierran mixed-conifer forests: a brief summary 284 KB
Jason J. Moghaddas and Scott L. Stephens Delayed conifer tree mortality following fire in California 936 KB
Sharon M. Hood, Sheri L. Smith, and Daniel R. Cluck Effects of fuel reduction treatments on breeding birds in a southern Appalachian upland hardwood forest 268 KB
Aimee L. Tomcho, Cathryn, H. Greenburg, J. Drew Lanham, Thomas A. Waldrop, Joseph Tomcho, and Dean Simon Poster Abstracts Riparian and upland vegetation on the Kings River Experimental Watershed, Sierra Nevada, California 100 KB
Christopher R. Dolanc and Carolyn T. Hunsaker Prescribed burning ineffective for improving turkey habitat on a recently regenerated mesic site in the southern Appalachian Mountains 32 KB
W. Henry McNab, Ted M. Oprean III, and Erik C. Berg Putting out fire with gasoline: pitfalls in the silvicultural treatment of canopy fuels 16 KB
Christopher R. Keyes and J. Morgan Varner Thinning and underburning effects on ground fuels in Jeffrey pine 112 KB
R.F. Walker, R.M. Fecko, W.B. Frederick, J.D. Murphy, W.W. Miller, and D.W. Johnson Thinning and underburning effects on productivity and mensurational characteristics of Jeffrey pine 120 KB
R.M. Fecko, R.F. Walker, W.B. Frederick, W.W. Miller, and D.W. Johnson Effect of burn residue proximity on growth of 5 planted mixed-conifer species after 6 years 120 KB
Robert A. York and Robert C. Heald Soil responses to the fire and fire surrogate study in the Sierra Nevada 96 KB
Emily E.Y Moghaddas and Scott L. Stephens The effect of mechanical fuel reduction treatments in the wildland-urban interface on the amount and distribution of bark beetle-caused tree mortality 116 KB
Christopher J. Fettig, Joel D. McMillin, John A. Anhold, Shakeeb M. Hamud, Robert R. Borys, and Steven J. Seybold Citation Powers, Robert F., tech. editor. 2007. Restoring fire-adapted ecosystems: proceedings of the 2005 national silviculture workshop Gen. Tech. Rep. PSW-GTR-203, Albany, CA: Pacific Southwest Research Station, Forest Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture. 306 p. |
|||||||||||||||||
top | Disclaimers | Privacy Policy | Print This Page | Webmaster |