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Fire Refugia: What Are They, and Why Do They Matter for Global Change?

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Meddens, Arjan J H, Kolden, Crystal A, Lutz, James A, Smith, Alistair M S, Cansler, C Alina, Abatzoglou, John T, Meigs, Garrett W, Downing, William M, and Krawchuk, Meg A, Fire Refugia: What Are They, and Why Do They Matter for Global Change?: BioScience, v. 68, iss. 12.

Summary

Abstract (from Oxford Academic): Fire refugia are landscape elements that remain unburned or minimally affected by fire, thereby supporting postfire ecosystem function, biodiversity, and resilience to disturbances. Although fire refugia have been studied across continents, scales, and affected taxa, they have not been characterized systematically over space and time, which is crucial for understanding their role in facilitating resilience in the context of global change. We identify four dichotomies that delineate an overarching conceptual framework of fire refugia: unburned versus lower severity, species-specific versus landscape-process characteristics, predictable versus stochastic, and ephemeral versus persistent. We outline the [...]

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  • National and Regional Climate Adaptation Science Centers
  • Northwest CASC

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Organization
Science Themes
Drought, Fire and Extreme Weather
Landscapes
NCCWSC Science Themes
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journalBioScience
parts
typestartPage
value944
typeendPage
value954
typedoi
value10.1093/biosci/biy103
typevolume
value68
typeissue
value12
typeissn
value0006-3568

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