Pages that link to "Item:Q138984"
From geokb
The following pages link to Craig D. Allen (Q138984):
Displayed 50 items.
- Post-fire wood management alters water stress, growth, and performance of pine regeneration in a Mediterranean ecosystem (Q244646) (← links)
- Modeling aeolian transport in response to succession, disturbance and future climate: Dynamic long-term risk assessment for contaminant redistribution (Q245209) (← links)
- Soil C and N patterns in a semiarid piñon-juniper woodland: Topography of slope and ephemeral channels add to canopy-intercanopy heterogeneity (Q245230) (← links)
- The macroecology of sustainability (Q245306) (← links)
- Effects of biotic disturbances on forest carbon cycling in the United States and Canada (Q245599) (← links)
- A 21st century perspective on postfire seeding (Q246237) (← links)
- A global overview of drought and heat-induced tree mortality reveals emerging climate change risks for forests (Q247318) (← links)
- Growth, carbon-isotope discrimination, and drought-associated mortality across a Pinus ponderosa elevational transect (Q247367) (← links)
- Regional vegetation die-off in response to global-change-type drought (Q249570) (← links)
- Millennial precipitation reconstruction for the Jemez Mountains, New Mexico, reveals changing drought signal (Q250435) (← links)
- The effects of α-cellulose extraction and blue-stain fungus on retrospective studies of carbon and oxygen isotope variation in live and dead trees† (Q250630) (← links)
- Response of western mountain ecosystems to climatic variability and change: A collaborative research approach (Q251267) (← links)
- Extended megadroughts in the southwestern United States during Pleistocene interglacials (Q251468) (← links)
- Development of the mixed conifer forest in northern New Mexico and its relationship to Holocene environmental change (Q252773) (← links)
- Mechanisms of plant survival and mortality during drought: Why do some plants survive while others succumb to drought? (Q252968) (← links)
- Simulated increases in fire activity reinforce shrub conversion in a southwestern US forest (Q253528) (← links)
- Overview of La Mesa studies (Q254268) (← links)
- A dirty dozen ways to die: Metrics and modifiers of mortality driven by drought and warming for a tree species (Q254370) (← links)
- Mechanisms of a coniferous refugium persistence under drought and heat (Q255323) (← links)
- A shrubbier future: Forest transformation in the eastern Jemez Mountains (Q257048) (← links)
- Landscape-scale fire history studies support fire management action at Bandelier (Q257391) (← links)
- A ponderosa pine natural area reveals its secrets (Q258126) (← links)
- Ecological perspective: Linking ecology, GIS, and remote sensing to ecosystem management (Q258157) (← links)
- Pinyon-juniper woodlands (Q260454) (← links)
- Landscape ecology: a concept for protecting park resources (Q260544) (← links)
- Climate-induced forest dieback: An escalating global phenomenon? (Q260889) (← links)
- To what extent is drought-induced tree mortality a natural phenomenon? (Q262179) (← links)
- Historical and modern disturbance regimes of pinyon-juniper vegetation in the western U.S (Q263901) (← links)
- Runoff and erosion on the Pajarito Plateau: Observations from the field (Q264109) (← links)
- Fire in the west: It's no simple story (Q264615) (← links)
- Geographic patterns of ground-dwelling arthropods across an ecoregional transition in the north American Southwest (Q264914) (← links)
- Ecohydrology of a resource-conserving semiarid woodland: Effects of scale and disturbance (Q266028) (← links)
- Paired charcoal and tree-ring records of high-frequency Holocene fire from two New Mexico bog sites (Q267538) (← links)
- Elk response to the La Mesa fire and current status in the Jemez Mountains (Q267644) (← links)
- An overview of the Valles Caldera National Preserve: the natural and cultural resources (Q272115) (← links)
- Key landscape ecology metrics for assessing climate change adaptation options: Rate of change and patchiness of impacts (Q273354) (← links)
- Climate change and disturbance interactions: Workshop on climate change and disturbance interactions in western North America, Tucson, Ariz., 12-15 February 2007 (Q274559) (← links)
- Drought-induced shift of a forest-woodland ecotone: Rapid landscape response to climate variation (Q274636) (← links)
- Extreme events trigger terrestrial and marine ecosystem collapses: A tale of two regions (Q275396) (← links)
- Overview of fire history in the Jemez Mountains, New Mexico (Q275495) (← links)
- A thousand years in the life of a landscape (Q276133) (← links)
- Drivers and mechanisms of tree mortality in moist tropical forests (Q276713) (← links)
- Tree die-off in response to global change-type drought: Mortality insights from a decade of plant water potential measurements (Q277432) (← links)
- Two middle Pleistocene glacial-interglacial cycles from the Valle Grande, Jemez Mountains, northern New Mexico (Q278736) (← links)
- Ecological restoration of southwestern ponderosa pine ecosystems: A broad perspective (Q280142) (← links)
- Holocene vegetation and fire regimes in subalpine and mixed conifer forests, southern Rocky Mountains, USA (Q281667) (← links)
- Forest management under megadrought: Urgent actions needed at finer-scale and higher intensity (Q281841) (← links)
- Fire in the southwest: Integrating fire into management of changing ecosystems (Q282538) (← links)
- The Pajarito Plateau: A bibliography (Q283110) (← links)
- Climate-induced tree mortality: Earth system consequences (Q284668) (← links)