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Library Variability and persistence of post-fire biological legacies in jack pine-dominated ecosystems of northern Lower Michigan

Variability and persistence of post-fire biological legacies in jack pine-dominated ecosystems of northern Lower Michigan

Variability and persistence of post-fire biological legacies in jack pine-dominated ecosystems of northern Lower Michigan

Resource information

Date of publication
December 2012
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
AGRIS:US201500015140
Pages
148-158

On the dry, flat, jack pine (Pinus banksiana Lamb.)-dominated ecosystems of the northern Lake States and eastern Canada, wildfire behavior often produces narrow, remnant strips of unburned trees that provide heterogeneity on a landscape historically shaped by stand-replacing wildfires. We used landscape metrics to analyze a chronosequence of aerial imagery to examine these “stringers” of mature trees within historical wildfires in northern Lower Michigan. Our major objective was to describe the natural range of variability of stringer patterns and their persistence and change during the fire-free interval. Field studies were then used to examine stringer composition and structural variability. Stringers were found to occur in all fires >1000ha, in about one-third of wildfires >80ha, but never in fires

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Authors and Publishers

Author(s), editor(s), contributor(s)

Kashian, Daniel M.
Gregory Corace, R., III
Shartell, Lindsey M.
Donner, Deahn M.
Huber, Philip W.

Publisher(s)
Data Provider
Geographical focus