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Dendroecology

Dendroecology. Dendroecology. Dendroecology uses dated tree rings to study ecological events such as fire and insect outbreaks Was developed by Theodor Hartig and Robert Hartig in late 1800s Germany In the US, dendroecology did not develop until the 1970s with the work of Hal Fritts

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Dendroecology

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  1. Dendroecology

  2. Dendroecology • Dendroecology uses dated tree rings to study ecological events such as fire and insect outbreaks • Was developed by Theodor Hartig and Robert Hartig in late 1800s Germany • In the US, dendroecology did not develop until the 1970s with the work of Hal Fritts • Since the 1970s, dendroecology has come to include fire history, insects, masting, stand-age structure, pathogen outbreaks, and endogenous disturbance history

  3. Dendropyrochronology • Reconstruction of fire histories is one of the major applications of dendrochronology for use in management of forests and the reestablishment of fire as a disturbance agent • The goal of the dendrochronologists is to determine the natural range of variability for fire on a particular site, which describes …

  4. Fire Regimes • A natural fire regime is a general classification of the role fire would play across a landscape in the absence of modern human intervention, but including the influence of aboriginal burning. • In the southeastern US, there have been 4 different fire regimes

  5. Southeastern Fire Regimes • Fire-tolerant species – species that are able to survive fire events • Examples – most pines (excluding white pine) and several species of oak • Fire-intolerant species – species that are not able to survive fire events • Examples – maples, tulip poplars, sycamores, gums

  6. Southeastern Fire Regimes • The third type of fire regime began with the Industrial Revolution when widespread timber harvesting used steam-driven locomotives that also provided the ignition source for an era of high-severity fires

  7. Fire exclusion – the most successful ad campaign ever…

  8. The Problem • The urban-wildland interface can be defined as an elevated human population living in a natural setting adjacent to population centers

  9. Types of fires: Surface fire - Stand replacing fire - Ground fire -

  10. Low severity wildfires … stays on the ground. Kills grass, shrubs, seedlings, saplings, dead and decayed trees, and diseased trees.

  11. … versus high severity wildfires… kills everything

  12. Fire regimes: • Fire frequency: how often • Fire seasonality: when fires occur throughout the year • Fire severity: effects on forests – not a measure of fire temperature • Fire intensity: a measure of fire temperature • Fire extent: spatial aspects • Patchy fires versus landscape level fires • Fire variability: changes in fire over time and space • Climatic or human-driven?

  13. The fire-scar record from tree rings. Fire scars Catface on Table Mountain pine log, Reddish Knob, Virginia

  14. The fire-scar record from tree rings. Fire scars on ponderosa pine, El Malpais National Monument, New Mexico

  15. Notice how the tree tries to compartmentalize the fire scar wound by growing succeeding years around the wound. Detail of fire scar on ponderosa pine, El Malpais National Monument, New Mexico

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