Fire Suppression is Necessary in California Chaparral: Research Brief

It  is  concluded  that  there  is  a  wealth  of   information  on  factors  affecting  fire  size  in   southern  California  that  make  it  unnecessary  to   base  fire  management  in  the  region  on   questionable  comparisons  with  Baja  California. 
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Fire Severity and Ecosystem Responses: USGS Research Brief

Two important questions about fire severity that are investigated are: to what extent can fire severity be measured by remote sensing indices, and do fire severity measurements predict ecosystem responses in vegetation recovery. 
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Fire Mosaics in Southern California and Baja California: Research Brief

In  a  comparative  study  of  fire  sizes  north  and   south  of  the  U.S./Mexican  border  Minnich  (1983)   demonstrated  differences  during  a  nine  year   period  in  non-­‐forested  landscapes  that  included   chaparral,  sage  scrub  and  annual  grassland.
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Fire Management Impacts on Invasive Plants: USGS Research Brief

In the April issue of Conservation Biology, Keeley considers the impact of six fire management practices on alien invasions: fire suppression, forest fuel reduction, prescription burning in crown fire ecosystems, fuel breaks, targeting noxious aliens, and postfire rehabilitation. 
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Fire Management and Invasive Plants: A Handbook for Land Managers: USGS Research Brief

USGS research botanist Matt Brooks and National Wildlife Refuges invasive species coordinator Michael Lusk have compiled a handbook titled Fire Management and Invasive Plants, with support from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service National Refuge System, USGS and the Joint Fire Science Program.
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Fire Induced Changes in Mice and Vole Populations: Research Brief

Cook used  the 1953 wildfire in Berkeley, CAas  an  opportunity  to  research  the   effects  of  fire  on  rodent  populations in  California grasslands  and  “brushlands.”
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Factors Behind Vegetation Mosaics in the Central Coast: Research Brief

In  central  coastal  California, a  complex   mosaic  of  vegetation  types  appears  to  be   largely  unrelated  to  substrate  and  more   strongly  determined  by  disturbance   history,  in  particular  human  induced   changes  in  fire  frequency.
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Evolutionary Origins of Plant Adaptations Should Not Influence Fire Management Decisions: USGS Research Brief

In response to a recent criticism of the practice of prescription burning published in Trends in Plant Science, USGS scientist Jon Keeley and colleagues from Spain, South Africa and Australia contend that when applied within the context of a landscape’s natural fire regime, prescribed burning remains a viable treatment to manage native plant ecosystems.
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Evaluating management risks to Southern Sierra fisher: Research synthesis  

Models  of  fisher habitat  selection  and   metapopulation  dynamics  in  the  southern   Sierra  Nevada  suggest  the  negative  effects   of  fuel  treatments  on  fisher  habitat   suitability  and  population  size  are   generally  smaller  than  the  long-­‐term   positive  effects  of  fuel  treatments that reduce  wildfire  risk  and  severity.
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Endemic Walking-sticks Persist Through Chaparral Fire: Research Brief

With a mark-recapture study, individual walking sticks were observed to travel up to only 8m per week, validating the conclusion that the post-burn population was indeed a persistent population, rather than an immigrant one.
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Effects of thinning and prescribed fire on tree survival: Research Brief

A  wildfire  at  Blacks  Mountain  Experimental   Forest (BMEF) in  northern  California  provided  a rare  opportunity  to  compare fire  behavior  and   effects  in  treated  and  untreated  ponderosa  pine   forests. 
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