Related Content
Search Google Scholar for:
More Information
Related Jobs from ScienceCareers
|
|
Science 11 June 1999: Vol. 284. no. 5421, pp. 1829 - 1832 DOI: 10.1126/science.284.5421.1829
|
|
Reports
Reexamining Fire Suppression Impacts on Brushland Fire Regimes
Jon E. Keeley,
1*
C. J. Fotheringham,
2
Marco Morais
3
California shrubland wildfires are increasingly
destructive, and it is widely held that the problem has been
intensified by fire suppression, leading to larger, more intense
wildfires. However, analysis of the California Statewide Fire History
Database shows that, since 1910, fire frequency and area burned have
not declined, and fire size has not increased. Fire rotation intervals
have declined, and fire season has not changed, implying that fire intensity has not increased. Fire frequency and population density were
correlated, and it is suggested that fire suppression plays a critical
role in offsetting potential impacts of increased ignitions. Large
fires were not dependent on old age classes of fuels, and it is thus
unlikely that age class manipulation of fuels can prevent large fires.
Expansion of the urban-wildland interface is a key factor in wildland
fire destruction.
1 U.S. Geological Survey Biological Resources
Division, Western Ecological Research Center, Sequoia-Kings Canyon
Field Station, 47050 Generals Highway, Three Rivers, CA 93271-9651,
USA.
2 Center for Environmental Analysis-Centers
for Research Excellence in Science and Technology, Department of
Biology and Microbiology, California State University, Los Angeles, CA
90032, USA.
3 U.S. National Park Service, Santa
Monica Mountains National Recreation Area, Thousand Oaks, CA 91360, USA.
*
To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail:
jon_keeley{at}usgs.gov
Present address: Organismic Biology, Ecology, and
Evolution, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA.
Present address: Department of Geography, University
of California, Santa Barbara, CA 93106, USA.
Read the Full Text
THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES:
- Environmental drivers of large, infrequent wildfires: the emerging conceptual model.
- A. Meyn, P. S. White, C. Buhk, and A. Jentsch (2007)
Progress in Physical Geography
31, 287-312
| Abstract »
| PDF »
- Playing with Fire: Endogenous Risk in Resource Management.
- J. Yoder (2004)
Am. J. Agr. Econ.
86, 933-948
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- Complexity and robustness.
- J. M. Carlson and J. Doyle (2002)
PNAS
99, 2538-2545
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- Biomechanics and anatomy of cladode junctions for two Opuntia (Cactaceae) species and their hybrid.
- E. G. Bobich and P. S. Nobel (2001)
Am. J. Botany
88, 391-400
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
|
|