The following pages link to Phillip van Mantgem (Q49925):
Displayed 50 items.
- Forest structure and residual tree growth at the Northwest Gateway project area, Lassen Volcanic National Park, California (Q55348) (← links)
- Thinning, tree-growth, and resistance to multi-year drought in a mixed-conifer forest of northern California (Q144928) (← links)
- Vegetation community monitoring: Species composition and biophysical gradients in Klamath Network parks (Q146064) (← links)
- Patterns of conifer invasion following prescribed fire in grasslands and oak woodlands of Redwood National Park, California (Q146361) (← links)
- The influence of prefire tree growth and crown condition on postfire mortality of sugar pine following prescribed fire in Sequoia National Park (Q147741) (← links)
- Structure, diversity, and biophysical properties of old-growth forestsin the Klamath region, USA (Q147945) (← links)
- Effects of an introduced pathogen and fire exclusion on the demography of sugar pine (Q148523) (← links)
- Predictive accuracy of post-fire conifer death declines over time in models based on crown and bole injury (Q150214) (← links)
- Duration of fuels reduction following prescribed fire in coniferous forests of U.S. national parks in California and the Colorado Plateau (Q151165) (← links)
- The relative contributions of disease and insects in the decline of a long-lived tree: a stochastic demographic model of whitebark pine (Pinus albicaulis) (Q152907) (← links)
- Pre‐fire drought and competition mediate post‐fire conifer mortality in western U.S. National Parks (Q156455) (← links)
- Effects of postfire climate and seed availability on postfire conifer regeneration (Q156491) (← links)
- Crowding, climate, and the case for social distancing among trees (Q156505) (← links)
- Growth, drought response, and climate-associated genomic structure in whitebark pine in the Sierra Nevada of California (Q156528) (← links)
- Drought survival strategies differ between coastal and montane conifers in northern California (Q157305) (← links)
- Can Prescribed Fire Help Forests Survive Drought in the Sierra Nevada Mountains? (Q160467) (← links)
- Understanding Fire-caused Vegetation Type Conversion in Southwestern Conifer Forests under Current and Future Climate Conditions (Q160540) (← links)
- Fighting Drought with Fire: A Comparison of Burned and Unburned Forests in Drought-Impacted Areas of the Southwest (Q160705) (← links)
- How Does Drought Influence Fire Severity in the Southwestern U.S.? (Q160706) (← links)
- Post-Fire Conifer Regeneration Under a Warming Climate: Will Severe Fire Be a Catalyst for Forest Loss? (Q160802) (← links)
- Characterizing Post-Fire Burn Severity And Vegetation Recovery At High Spatial And Temporal Resolutions Using Basal Area Measurements (Q226801) (← links)
- WERC Fire Science (Q229144) (← links)
- Redwood Field Station (Q229624) (← links)
- Population persistence in Florida torreya: Comparing modeled projections of a declining coniferous tree (Q236001) (← links)
- An individual-based growth and competition model for coastal redwood forest restoration (Q236834) (← links)
- Does prescribed fire promote resistance to drought in low elevation forests of the Sierra Nevada, California, USA? (Q238724) (← links)
- Characterizing interactions between fire and other disturbances and their impacts on tree mortality in western U.S. Forests (Q239833) (← links)
- Growth rate predicts mortality of Abies concolor in both burned and unburned stands (Q240772) (← links)
- Climatic correlates of tree mortality in water- and energy-limited forests (Q244503) (← links)
- Forest reproduction along a climatic gradient in the Sierra Nevada, California (Q246277) (← links)
- The effects of raking on sugar pine mortality following prescribed fire in Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks, California, USA (Q247195) (← links)
- The accuracy of matrix population model projections for coniferous trees in the Sierra Nevada, California (Q249262) (← links)
- Response of western mountain ecosystems to climatic variability and change: A collaborative research approach (Q251267) (← links)
- The contribution of competition to tree mortality in old-growth coniferous forests (Q251408) (← links)
- Long-term effects of prescribed fire on mixed conifer forest structure in the Sierra Nevada, California (Q251689) (← links)
- Spatial elements of mortality risk in old-growth forests (Q252874) (← links)
- Whitebark pine in the national parks of the Pacific states: An assessment of population vulnerability (Q253193) (← links)
- A large database supports the use of simple models of post-fire tree mortality for thick-barked conifers, with less support for other species (Q253216) (← links)
- Tree-ring evidence of forest management moderating drought responses: Implications for dry, coniferous forests in the southwestern United States (Q253253) (← links)
- Seed production patterns of surviving Sierra Nevada conifers show minimal change following drought (Q256803) (← links)
- Negligible influence of spatial autocorrelation in the assessment of fire effects in a mixed conifer forest (Q261882) (← links)
- Forest resistance to extended drought enhanced by prescribed fire in low elevation forests of the Sierra Nevada (Q262052) (← links)
- Long-term effects of prescribed fire on large tree growth in mixed conifer forests at Lassen Volcanic National Park, California (Q262272) (← links)
- The energy–water limitation threshold explains divergent drought responses in tree growth, needle length, and stable isotope ratios (Q264089) (← links)
- The Fire and Tree Mortality Database, for empirical modeling of individual tree mortality after fire (Q264736) (← links)
- Vegetation type conversion in the US Southwest: Frontline observations and management responses (Q264811) (← links)
- Evaluating and optimizing the use of logistic regression for tree mortality models in the First Order Fire Effects Model (FOFEM) (Q265220) (← links)
- Fire, climate and changing forests (Q266617) (← links)
- Higher sensitivity and lower specificity in post-fire mortality model validation of 11 western US tree species (Q270454) (← links)
- Estimating the magnitude of decline of the Florida torreya (Torreya taxifolia Arn.) (Q271998) (← links)