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DOI | 10.3389/fevo.2019.00185 |
Operationalizing Resilience and Resistance Concepts to Address Invasive Grass-Fire Cycles | |
Chambers, Jeanne C.1; Brooks, Matthew L.2; Germino, Matthew J.3; Maestas, Jeremy D.4; Board, David I.1; Jones, Matthew O.5; Allred, Brady W.6 | |
发表日期 | 2019 |
ISSN | 2296-701X |
卷号 | 7 |
英文摘要 | Plant invasions can affect fuel characteristics, fire behavior, and fire regimes resulting in invasive plant-fire cycles and alternative, self-perpetuating states that can be difficult, if not impossible, to reverse. Concepts related to general resilience to disturbance and resistance to invasive plants provide the basis for managing landscapes to increase their capacity to reorganize and adjust following fire, while concepts related to spatial resilience provide the basis for managing landscapes to conserve resources and habitats and maintain connectivity. New, spatially explicit approaches and decision-tools enable managers to understand and evaluate general and spatial resilience to fire and resistance to invasive grasses across large landscapes in arid and semi-arid shrublands and woodlands. These approaches and tools provide the capacity to locate management actions strategically to prevent development of invasive grass-fire cycles and maintain or improve resources and habitats. In this review, we discuss the factors that influence fire regimes, general and spatial resilience to fire, resistance to invasive annual grasses, and thus invasive grass-fire cycles in global arid and semi-arid shrublands and woodlands. The Cold Deserts, Mediterranean Ecoregion, and Warm Deserts of North America are used as model systems to describe how and why resilience to disturbance and resistance to invasive annuals differ over large landscapes. The Cold Deserts are used to illustrate an approach and decision tools for prioritizing areas on the landscape for management actions to prevent development of invasive grass-fire cycles and protect high value resources and habitats and for determining effective management strategies. The concepts and approach herein represent a paradigm shift in the management of these ecosystems, which allows managers to use geospatial tools to identify resilience to disturbance and resistance to invasive plants in order to target conservation and restoration actions where they will provide the greatest benefits. |
WOS研究方向 | Environmental Sciences & Ecology |
来源期刊 | FRONTIERS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION |
文献类型 | 期刊论文 |
条目标识符 | http://gcip.llas.ac.cn/handle/2XKMVOVA/99025 |
作者单位 | 1.US Forest Serv, USDA, Rocky Mt Res Stn, Reno, NV 89511 USA; 2.US Geol Survey, Western Ecol Res Ctr, Oakhurst, CA USA; 3.US Geol Survey, Forest & Rangeland Ecosyst Sci Ctr, Boise, ID USA; 4.Nat Resources Conservat Serv, USDA, West Natl Technol Support Ctr, Portland, OR USA; 5.Univ Montana, Numer Terradynam Simulat Grp, Missoula, MT 59812 USA; 6.Univ Montana, WA Franke Coll Forestry & Conservat, Missoula, MT 59812 USA |
推荐引用方式 GB/T 7714 | Chambers, Jeanne C.,Brooks, Matthew L.,Germino, Matthew J.,et al. Operationalizing Resilience and Resistance Concepts to Address Invasive Grass-Fire Cycles[J],2019,7. |
APA | Chambers, Jeanne C..,Brooks, Matthew L..,Germino, Matthew J..,Maestas, Jeremy D..,Board, David I..,...&Allred, Brady W..(2019).Operationalizing Resilience and Resistance Concepts to Address Invasive Grass-Fire Cycles.FRONTIERS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION,7. |
MLA | Chambers, Jeanne C.,et al."Operationalizing Resilience and Resistance Concepts to Address Invasive Grass-Fire Cycles".FRONTIERS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION 7(2019). |
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