Return to Wildland Fire
Return to Northern Bobwhite site
Return to Working Lands for Wildlife site
Return to Working Lands for Wildlife site
Return to SE Firemap
Return to the Landscape Partnership Literature Gateway Website
return
return to main site

Skip to content. | Skip to navigation

Sections

Personal tools

You are here: Home / Resources / Climate Science Documents / Climate Science Document Library 2010

Climate Science Document Library 2010

Title Description
Global shifts towards positive species interactions with increasing environmental stress The study of positive species interactions is a rapidly evolving field in ecology. Despite decades of research, controversy has emerged as to whether positive a...
The River Discontinuum: Applying Beaver Modifications to Baseline Conditions for Restoration of Forested Headwaters Billions of dollars are being spent in the United States to restore rivers to a desired, yet often unknown, reference condition. In lieu of a known reference, p...
Climate change and tropical biodiversity: a new focus Considerable efforts are focused on the consequences of climate change for tropical rainforests. However, potentially the greatest threats to tropical biodivers...
Protected Areas as Frontiers for Human Migration Causes of human population growth near protected areas have been much debated. We conducted 821 interviews in 16 villages around Budongo Forest Reserve, Masind...
Carbon Storage with Benefits Biochar—a material related to charcoal—has the potential to benefit farming as well as mitigate climate change.
Future hotspots of terrestrial mammal loss Current levels of endangerment and historical trends of species and habitats are the main criteria used to direct conservation efforts globally. Estimates of fu...
Biodiversity and the Feel-Good Factor: Understanding Associations between Self-Reported Human Well-being and Species Richness Over half of the world’s human population lives in cities, and for many, urban greenspaces are the only places where they encounter biodiversity. This is of p...
Large in-stream wood studies: a call for common metrics During the past decade, research on large in-stream wood has expanded beyond North America’s Pacifi c Northwest to diverse environments and has shifted towar...
Changes in forest productivity across Alaska consistent with biome shift Global vegetation models predict that boreal forests are particularly sensitive to a biome shift during the 21st century. This shift would manifest itself first...
Rescuing Wolves from Politics: Wildlife as a Public Trust Resource Long-term conservation of gray wolves is possible if states recognize a legal obligation to conserve species as a public trust resource
Challenges of ecological restoration: Lessons from forests in northern Europe The alarming rate of ecosystem degradation has raised the need for ecological restoration throughout different biomes and continents. North European forests may...
Has the Earth’s sixth mass extinction already arrived? Palaeontologists characterize mass extinctions as times when the Earth loses more than three-quarters of its species in a geologically short interval, as has ha...
Rebuilding Soils on Mined Land for Native Forests in Appalachia The eastern U.S. Appalachian region supports the world’s most extensive temperate forests, but surface mining for coal has caused forest loss. New reclamati...
Global non-linear effect of temperature on economic production Growing evidence demonstrates that climatic conditions can have a profound impact on the functioning of modern human societies (1,2), but effects on economic ac...
Reconciling nature conservation and traditional farming practices: a spatially explicit framework to assess the extent of High Nature Value farmlands in the European countryside Over past centuries, European landscapes have been shaped by human management. Traditional, low intensity agricultural practices, adapted to local climatic, geo...
Coupled catastrophes: sudden shifts cascade and hop among interdependent systems From the Introduction: Sudden changes propagating among coupled systems pose a significant scientific challenge in many disciplines, yet we lack an adequate mat...
Recent acceleration of biomass burning and carbon losses in Alaskan forests and peatlands Climate change has increased the area affected by forest fires each year in boreal North America1,2. Increases in burned area and fire frequency are expected to...
Plant-Pollinator Interactions over 120 Years: Loss of Species, Co-Occurrence, and Function Using historic data sets, we quantified the degree to which global change over 120 years disrupted plant-pollinator interactions in a temperate forest understor...
Commentary: The climate policy narrative for a dangerously warming world It is time to acknowledge that global average temperatures are likely to rise above the 2 °C policy target and consider how that deeply troubling prospect shou...
Tree spatial patterns in fire-frequent forests of western North America, including mechanisms of pattern formation and implications for designing fuel reduction and restoration treatments Restoring characteristic fire regimes and forest structures are central objectives of many restoration and fuel reduction projects. Within-stand spatial pattern...