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Author(s):
Ellis Q. Margolis, Andreas P. Wion, John T. Abatzoglou, Lori D. Daniels, Donald A. Falk, Christopher H. Guiterman, James D. Johnston, Kurt F. Kipfmueller, Charles W. Lafon, Rachel A. Loehman, Maggie Lonergan, Cameron Naficy, Marc-Andre Parisien, Sean A. Parks, Jeanne Portier, Michael C. Stambaugh, Ellen Whitman, A. Park Williams, Larissa Yocum
Year Published:

Cataloging Information

Topic(s):
Fire History
Fire & Climate

NRFSN number: 27725
Record updated:

Increasing aridity has driven widespread synchronous fire occurrence in recent decades across North America. The lack of historical (pre-1880) fire records limits our ability to understand long-term continental fire-climate dynamics. The goal of this study is to use tree-ring reconstructions to determine the relationships between spatiotemporal patterns in historical climate and widespread fire occurrence in North American forests, and whether they are stable through time. This information will address a major knowledge gap required to inform projections of future fire.

Citation

Margolis, Ellis; Wion, Andreas; Abatzoglou, John; Daniels, Lori; Falk, Donald; Guiterman, Chris; Johnston, James; Kipfmueller, Kurt; Lafon, Charles; Loehman, Rachel; Lonergan, Maggie; Naficy, Cameron; Parisien, Marc-André; Parks, Sean; Portier, Jeanne; Stambaugh, Michael; Whitman, Ellen; Williams, A. Park; Yocum, Larissa. 2025: Spatiotemporal synchrony of climate and fire occurrence across North American forests (1750-188N0). Global Ecology and Biogeography. 34: e13937. https://doi.org/10.1111/geb.13937

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