The following pages link to Craig D. Allen (Q138984):
Displayed 50 items.
- Lots of lightning and plenty of people: An ecological history of fire in the upland southwest (Q143795) (← links)
- The cascading effects of fire exclusion in Rocky Mountain ecosystems (Q143796) (← links)
- The importance of rapid, disturbance-induced losses in carbon management and sequestration (Q143801) (← links)
- Nonlinear dynamics in ecosystem response to climatic change: Case studies and policy implications (Q144183) (← links)
- Applied historical ecology: Using the past to manage for the future (Q144866) (← links)
- Research frontiers for improving our understanding of drought‐induced tree and forest mortality (Q145065) (← links)
- Monitoring global tree mortality patterns and trends. Report from the VW symposium ‘Crossing scales and disciplines to identify global trends of tree mortality as indicators of forest health’ (Q145359) (← links)
- Long-term persistence and fire resilience of oak shrubfields in dry conifer forests of northern New Mexico (Q145653) (← links)
- Valleys of fire: Historical fire regimes of forest-grassland ecotones across the montane landscape of the Valles Caldera National Preserve, New Mexico, USA (Q146550) (← links)
- Cascading events in linked ecological and socioeconomic systems (Q146832) (← links)
- A stand-replacing fire history in upper montane forests of the southern Rocky Mountains (Q147007) (← links)
- Temperature as a potent driver of regional forest drought stress and tree mortality (Q147438) (← links)
- Statement of Dr. Craig D. Allen, U.S. Geological Survey, Department of the Interior, before the Committee on Energy and Natural Resources, U.S. Senate, 17 August 2012 (Q147570) (← links)
- Darcy’s law predicts widespread forest mortality under climate warming (Q147706) (← links)
- Adaptive management of social-ecological systems: The path forward (Q148017) (← links)
- Patterns and causes of observed piñon pine mortality in the southwestern United States (Q148059) (← links)
- Cross scale interactions, nonlinearities, and forecasting catastrophic events (Q148507) (← links)
- Effects of seeding ryegrass (Lolium multiflorum) on vegetation recovery following fire in a ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa) forest (Q148510) (← links)
- Ecological patterns and environmental change in the Bandelier landscape (Q148511) (← links)
- A 15 000-year record of climate change in northern New Mexico, USA, inferred from isotopic and elemental contents of bog sediments (Q148715) (← links)
- Forest responses to increasing aridity and warmth in the southwestern United States (Q148753) (← links)
- Climate, environment, and disturbance history govern resilience of western North American Forests (Q149453) (← links)
- Rapid broad-scale ecosystem changes and their consequences for biodiversity (Q149560) (← links)
- Landscape change, fire and erosion (Q150362) (← links)
- Soils (report) (Q150363) (← links)
- Changing disturbance regimes, ecological memory, and forest resilience (Q151221) (← links)
- Spatial nonlinearities: Cascading effects in the earth system (Q152257) (← links)
- Re-seeding research will help in cheatgrass battle (Q152271) (← links)
- Climate and land use interactions with vegetation change and disturbance processes in mountain ecosystems of the Southwestern USA (Q152353) (← links)
- Multiscale perspectives of fire, climate and humans in western North America and the Jemez Mountains, USA (Q152673) (← links)
- Seeing the forest and the trees: USGS scientist links local changes to global scale (Q153794) (← links)
- Salvage logging versus the use of burnt wood as a nurse object to promote post-fire tree seedling establishment (Q154037) (← links)
- Forest ecosystem re-organization underway in the southwestern US: A preview of widespread forest changes in the anthropocene? (Q154974) (← links)
- Forest ecosystem reorganization underway in the Southwestern US: A preview of widespread forest changes in the Anthropocene (Q154987) (← links)
- Mapping "old" versus "young" piñon-juniper stands with a predictive topo-climatic model in north-central New Mexico, USA (Q155595) (← links)
- Spatio-temporal variability of human-fire interactions on the Navajo Nation (Q157215) (← links)
- Viewpoint: Sustainability of piñon-juniper ecosystems - A unifying perspective of soil erosion thresholds (Q231346) (← links)
- Tree mortality from drought, insects, and their interactions in a changing climate (Q234163) (← links)
- Larger trees suffer most during drought in forests worldwide (Q234567) (← links)
- Unsupported inferences of high-severity fire in historical dry forests of the western United States: Response to Williams and Baker (Q236657) (← links)
- Multi-scale predictions of massive conifer mortality due to chronic temperature rise (Q238049) (← links)
- A multi-species synthesis of physiological mechanisms in drought-induced tree mortality (Q239724) (← links)
- Tree mortality across biomes is promoted by drought intensity, lower wood density and higher specific leaf area (Q239945) (← links)
- Structural overshoot of tree growth with climate variability and the global spectrum of drought-induced forest dieback (Q240072) (← links)
- Interactions across spatial scales among forest dieback, fire, and erosion in northern New Mexico landscapes (Q242055) (← links)
- The Malthusian-Darwinian dynamic and the trajectory of civilization (Q242847) (← links)
- Quantifying tree mortality in a mixed species woodland using multitemporal high spatial resolution satellite imagery (Q242980) (← links)
- Watering the forest for the trees: An emerging priority for managing water in forest landscapes (Q243811) (← links)
- An integrated model of environmental effects on growth, carbohydrate balance, and mortality of Pinus ponderosa forests in the southern Rocky Mountains (Q243956) (← links)
- Carbon stocks of trees killed by bark beetles and wildfire in the western United States (Q244623) (← links)