Pages that link to "Item:Q45617"
From geokb
The following pages link to Adrian Das (Q45617):
Displayed 50 items.
- Remote measurement of canopy water content in giant sequoias (Sequoiadendron giganteum) during drought (Q144907) (← links)
- Individual species–area relationships in temperate coniferous forests (Q145158) (← links)
- Landscape-scale variation in canopy water content of giant sequoias during drought (Q145541) (← links)
- Patterns and correlates of giant sequoia foliage dieback during California’s 2012–2016 hotter drought (Q145604) (← links)
- Continent-wide tree fecundity driven by indirect climate effects (Q146226) (← links)
- Why is tree drought mortality so hard to predict? (Q146268) (← links)
- Improving estimates of tree mortality probability using potential growth rate (Q147677) (← 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)
- Negative impacts of summer heat on Sierra Nevada tree seedlings (Q149577) (← links)
- A synthesis of radial growth patterns preceding tree mortality (Q152560) (← links)
- Why do trees die? Characterizing the drivers of background tree mortality (Q153269) (← links)
- What mediates tree mortality during drought in the southern Sierra Nevada? (Q156439) (← 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)
- Mapping the vulnerability of giant sequoias after extreme drought in California using remote sensing (Q156497) (← links)
- Crowding, climate, and the case for social distancing among trees (Q156505) (← links)
- Empirically validated drought vulnerability mapping in the mixed conifer forests of the Sierra Nevada (Q156507) (← links)
- Compounding effects of white pine blister rust, mountain pine beetle, and fire threaten four white pine species (Q157241) (← links)
- Leaf to Landscape: Understanding and Mapping the Vulnerability of Forests to Hotter Droughts (Q160209) (← links)
- Can Prescribed Fire Help Forests Survive Drought in the Sierra Nevada Mountains? (Q160467) (← links)
- Fighting Drought with Fire: A Comparison of Burned and Unburned Forests in Drought-Impacted Areas of the Southwest (Q160705) (← links)
- Post-Fire Conifer Regeneration Under a Warming Climate: Will Severe Fire Be a Catalyst for Forest Loss? (Q160802) (← links)
- Forest health and drought response (Q228220) (← links)
- Sequoia and Kings Canyon Field Station (Q229609) (← links)
- Beyond reducing fire hazard: fuel treatment impacts on overstory tree survival (Q236831) (← 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)
- Climatic correlates of tree mortality in water- and energy-limited forests (Q244503) (← links)
- Comment on "Changes in climatic water balance drive downhill shifts in plant species' optimum elevations" (Q250280) (← links)
- Seed production patterns of surviving Sierra Nevada conifers show minimal change following drought (Q256803) (← links)
- Snag dynamics and surface fuel loads in the Sierra Nevada: Predicting the impact of the 2012–2016 drought (Q261476) (← links)
- Forest resistance to extended drought enhanced by prescribed fire in low elevation forests of the Sierra Nevada (Q262052) (← links)
- Masting is uncommon in trees that depend on mutualist dispersers in the context of global climate and fertility gradients (Q263389) (← links)
- The Fire and Tree Mortality Database, for empirical modeling of individual tree mortality after fire (Q264736) (← links)
- Mortality factors for dead trees from a subset of plots from the Sierra Nevada Forest Dynamics Plot Network from 1998 to 2010 (Q264980) (← links)
- North American tree migration paced by climate in the West, lagging in the East (Q266747) (← links)
- Leaf to landscape responses of giant sequoia to hotter drought: An introduction and synthesis for the special section (Q269182) (← links)
- Early-warning signals of individual tree mortality based on annual radial growth (Q269262) (← links)
- Size matters, but not consistently (Q273982) (← links)
- Height-related changes in forest composition, not tree vulnerability, explain increasing mortality with height during an extreme drought (Q274813) (← links)
- Seasonal and diel environmental conditions predict western pond turtle (Emys marmorata) behavior at a perennial and an ephemeral stream in Sequoia National Park, California (Q276654) (← links)
- Limits to reproduction and seed size-number trade-offs that shape forest dominance and future recovery (Q278996) (← links)
- Post-fire reference densities for giant sequoia seedlings in a new era of high-severity wildfires (Q279612) (← links)
- Coming to terms with the new normal: Forest health in the Sierra Nevada (Q282903) (← links)
- Tree mortality in blue oak woodland during extreme drought in Sequoia National Park, California (Q283926) (← links)
- The influence of pre-fire growth patterns on post-fire tree mortality for common conifers in western U.S. parks (Q287829) (← links)
- Nonlinear shifts in infectious rust disease due to climate change (Q288678) (← links)
- Climate change risks to global forest health: Emergence of unexpected events of elevated tree mortality worldwide (Q289999) (← links)
- Which trees die during drought? The key role of insect host-tree selection (Q291544) (← links)
- A natural resource condition assessment for Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks: Appendix 22: climatic change (Q296806) (← links)