A dynamic reference model: a framework for assessing biodiversity restoration goals in a fire-dependent ecosystem.
@article{Kirkman2013ADR,
title={A dynamic reference model: a framework for assessing biodiversity restoration goals in a fire-dependent ecosystem.},
author={L. Katherine Kirkman and Analie Barnett and Brett W. Williams and J. K. Hiers and Scott Pokswinski and Robert J. Mitchell},
journal={Ecological applications : a publication of the Ecological Society of America},
year={2013},
volume={23 7},
pages={
1574-87
}
}The use of reference models as templates of historical or natural conditions to assess restoration progress is inherently logical; however, difficulties occur in application because of the need to incorporate temporal variation in ecosystems caused by disturbance and succession, as well as seasonal, interannual, or decadal variability. The landscape-scale restoration of the globally threatened and fire-dependent longleaf pine ecosystem in the southeastern United States is an example in which…
39 Citations
Land-Use History and Contemporary Management Inform an Ecological Reference Model for Longleaf Pine Woodland Understory Plant Communities
- Environmental SciencePloS one
- 2014
It is suggested that this work provides a framework for developing and evaluating reference models that incorporate multiple, interactive anthropogenic drivers of ecosystem degradation, and demonstrates the utility of quantifying degraded states and provides a series of hypotheses for future experimental restoration work.
The longleaf pine forest: Long-term monitoring and restoration of a management dependent ecosystem
- Environmental ScienceJournal for Nature Conservation
- 2019
The effects of management on long‐term carbon stability in a southeastern U.S. forest matrix under extreme fire weather
- Environmental ScienceEcosphere
- 2019
How fire interacts with an ecosystem is driven by forest structure, fuel bed heterogeneity, topography, and weather. The juxtaposition of two distinct vegetation types with divergent properties can…
Patterns of vegetation composition and diversity in pine-dominated ecosystems of the Outer Coastal Plain of North Carolina: Implications for ecosystem restoration ☆
- Environmental Science
- 2015
Novel Ecosystem Management: Evidence for Alternative Strategies in the Northern Great Plains
- Geography
- 2018
Biodiversity and ecosystem service conservation requires understanding the influence of management practices on ecosystem dynamics. Biological invasions in working landscapes can impair valuable…
Ecological characteristics of floodplain forest reference sites in the Upper Mississippi River System
- Environmental ScienceForest Ecology and Management
- 2018
Demographic responses of two endemic plants to sandhill restoration on the Lake Wales Ridge1
- Environmental Science
- 2013
The responses of two federally endangered plants to experimental restoration of fire-suppressed xeric longleaf pine/wiregrass habitat on the Lake Wales Ridge in south-central Florida are described, suggesting that chainsaw felling of the subcanopy can be an effective pre-burn treatment and, when followed by fire, can be useful in “speeding up” restoration.
The path back: oaks ( Quercus spp.) facilitate longleaf pine ( Pinus palustris ) seedling establishment in xeric sites
- Environmental Science
- 2016
Recognition that deciduous oaks are important facilitators of longleaf seedling establishment on xeric sites represents a significant departure from conventional wisdom and current management practices that has largely focused on competitive exclusion.
A critique of the historical-fire-regime concept in conservation.
- Environmental ScienceConservation biology : the journal of the Society for Conservation Biology
- 2017
It is found that the practice of inferring historical fire regimes for entire regions or ecosystems often entails substantial uncertainty and can yield equivocal results; ecological outcomes of fire suppression are complex and may not equate to degradation, depending on the ecosystem and context; and habitat fragmentation, invasive species, and other modern factors can interact with fire to produce novel and in some cases negative ecological outcomes.
Macroinvertebrate community assembly in pools created during peatland restoration.
- Environmental ScienceThe Science of the total environment
- 2016
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