Buy This Book

 

All Ebook Formats $59.99 ISBN: 9781610911917 Published March 2009
Hardcover $95.00 ISBN: 9781597261821 Published March 2009
Paperback $60.00 ISBN: 9781597261838 Published March 2009

RELATED BOOKS

  •  Big, Wild, and Connected
    Big, Wild, and Connected John Davis
  •  Coastal Impacts, Adaptation, and Vulnerabilities
    Coastal Impacts, Adaptation, and Vulnerabilities Virginia Burkett
  •  Discovering Big Cat Country
    Discovering Big Cat Country Eric Dinerstein
  •  Climate Change and Pacific Islands: Indicators and Impacts
    Climate Change and Pacific Islands: Indicators and Impacts Victoria Keener
  • The Kingdom of Rarities
    The Kingdom of Rarities Eric Dinerstein

Fire Ecology in Rocky Mountain Landscapes

 Fire Ecology in Rocky Mountain Landscapes
Bookmark and Share

William L. Baker

628 pages | 7 x 10
Fire Ecology in Rocky Mountain Landscapes brings a century of scientific research to bear on improving the relationship between people and fire.
 
In recent years, some scientists have argued that current patterns of fire are significantly different from historical patterns, and that landscapes should be managed with an eye toward reestablishing past fire regimes. At the policy level, state and federal agencies have focused on fuel reduction and fire suppression as a means of controlling fire.
 
Geographer William L. Baker takes a different view, making the case that the available scientific data show that infrequent episodes of large fires followed by long interludes with few fires led to naturally fluctuating landscapes, and that the best approach is not to try to change or control fire but to learn to live with it. In Fire Ecology in Rocky Mountain Landscapes, Baker reviews functional traits and responses of plants and animals to fire at the landscape scale; explains how scientists reconstruct the history of fire in landscapes; elaborates on the particulars of fire under the historical range of variability in the Rockies; and considers the role of Euro-Americans in creating the landscapes and fire situations of today.
 
In the end, the author argues that the most effective action is to rapidly limit and redesign people-nature interfaces to withstand fire, which he believes can be done in ways that are immediately beneficial to both nature and communities.
List of Illustrations
List of Tables
List of Boxes
Preface

Chapter 1.  Introduction
Chapter 2.  Lightning, Fuels, Topography, Climate, and Fire Behavior
Chapter 3.  Fire Effects on Plants: From Individuals to Landscapes
Chapter 4.  Fire Effects on Animals: From Individuals to Landscapes
Chapter 5.  Fire Regimes and Fire History in Landscapes
Chapter 6.  Fire in Pinon-Juniper, Montane Aspen, Mixed-Conifer, Riparian, and Wetland Landscapes
Chapter 7.  Fire in Ponderosa Pine and Douglas-Fir Forests
Chapter 8.  Fire in Subalpine Forests
Chapter 9.  Fire in Shrublands and Grasslands
Chapter 10. People and Fire: Land-Use Legacies across Landscapes
Chapter 11. Emerging Threats and Tools for Living with Fire in Landscapes
Chapter 12. Toward a Better Relationship between People and Fire

Appendix A. Common Rocky Mountain Trees and Their Functional Traits That May Increase Persistence
Appendix B. Common Rocky Mountain Shrubs and Their Response to Fire
Appendix C. Common Rocky Mountain Graminoids and Their Response to Fire
Appendix D. Modeling Studies of Mortality in Rocky Mountain Trees
Appendix #. Animal Species Mentioned in the Text

Glossary
References
About the Author
Index
Google preview here