Deciphering the Complexity of Historical Fire Regimes: Diversity Among Forests of Western North America

  • Daniels L
  • Yocom Kent L
  • Sherriff R
  • et al.
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Abstract

Ecological Studies is Springer’s premier book series treating all aspects of ecology. These volumes, either authored or edited collections, appear several times each year. They are intended to analyze and synthesize our understanding of natural and managed ecosystems and their constituent organisms and resources at different scales from the biosphere to communities, populations, individual organisms and molecular interactions. Many volumes constitute case studies illustrating and synthesizing ecological principles for an intended audience of scientists, students, environmental managers and policy experts. Recent volumes address biodiversity, global change, landscape ecology, air pollution, ecosystem analysis, microbial ecology, ecophysiology and molecular ecology.

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Daniels, L. D., Yocom Kent, L. L., Sherriff, R. L., & Heyerdahl, E. K. (2017). Deciphering the Complexity of Historical Fire Regimes: Diversity Among Forests of Western North America (pp. 185–210). https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-61669-8_8

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