Skip to main content

The Alaska Reference Database originated as the standalone Alaska Fire Effects Reference Database, a ProCite reference database maintained by former BLM-Alaska Fire Service Fire Ecologist Randi Jandt. It was expanded under a Joint Fire Science Program grant for the FIREHouse project (The Northwest and Alaska Fire Research Clearinghouse). It is now maintained by the Alaska Fire Science Consortium and FRAMES, and is hosted through the FRAMES Resource Catalog. The database provides a listing of fire research publications relevant to Alaska and a venue for sharing unpublished agency reports and works in progress that are not normally found in the published literature.

Displaying 201 - 225 of 333

Watson, Borrie, Burchfield, Wakimoto
There is currently limited understanding of the social acceptability of the various means of treatment of forest or grassland fuels. Either through the application of prescribed fire or mechanical means, the social and economic implications of fuel treatments can be decisive in…
Year: 2001
Type: Project
Source: FRAMES

Brownlie
Year: 2001
Type: Project
Source: FRAMES

Fujioka
Objectives: Bring together key decision makers, information providers, researchers, and managers concerned about climate implications for management of forest fire hazards and prescribed burning. Evaluate the 2000 fire season in the context of information presented at our…
Year: 2001
Type: Project
Source: FRAMES

Keane, Neuenschwander, Ryan
This fuels mapping project has one main objectives. To develop methods for creating spatial fuels layers for fire behavior and fire effects prediction systems and hazard and risk assessment The primary goal of this objective is to develop methods and protocols for creating high…
Year: 2001
Type: Project
Source: FRAMES

Belnap, Kaltenecker, Rosentreter, Williams, Leonard, Eldridge
In arid and semi-arid lands throughout the world, vegetation cover is often sparse or absent. Nevertheless, in open spaces between the higher plants, the soil surface is generally not bare of autotrophic life, but covered by a community of highly specialized organisms. These…
Year: 2001
Type: Document
Source: FRAMES

Adams
[no description entered]
Year: 1960
Type: Document
Source: TTRS

Boham
Description not entered.
Year: 2001
Type: Document
Source: FRAMES

Wurtz, Zasada
We present 27-year results from a comparison of clear-cutting and shelterwood harvesting in the boreal forest of Alaska. Three patch clear-cut and three shelterwood units were harvested in 1972; about 100 dispersed white spruce (Picea glauca (Moench) Voss) leave trees per…
Year: 2001
Type: Document
Source: FRAMES

Wilde, Krause
Based on an extensive survey of 200 areas and a detailed examination of soil and forest composition and increment on 37 sample plots, a description is given, with profile and data on soil properties, of skeletal (lithosols and regosols), alluvial, melanized raw humus, micro-…
Year: 1960
Type: Document
Source: FRAMES

Sturm, Racine, Tape
The warming of the Alaskan Arctic during the past 150 years has accelerated over the last three decades and is expected to increase vegetation productivity in tundra if shrubs become more abundant; indeed, this transition may already be under way according to local plot studies…
Year: 2001
Type: Document
Source: FRAMES

Simberloff
Many new concepts for managing production forests so as to preserve biodiversity have found their way into management procedures without much testing to make them most effective. In most regions, the general framework for a new approach has been ecosystem management, although…
Year: 2001
Type: Document
Source: FRAMES

Silapaswan, Verbyla, McGuire
Vegetation on the Seward Peninsula, Alaska, which is characterized by transitions from tundra to boreal forest, may be sensitive to the influences of climate change on disturbance and species composition. To determine the ability to detect decadal-scale structural changes in…
Year: 2001
Type: Document
Source: FRAMES

Senkowsky
Here in Delta Junction, a stand of black spruce once cut a classic postcard profile against the snow-capped backdrop of the Alaska Range. But in 1999, it burned in the Donnelly Flats wildfire, a blaze that consumed 18,000 acres of forest. What's left looks like a field of…
Year: 2001
Type: Document
Source: FRAMES, TTRS

Robinson
From introduction: 'Alaska has a crucial forest fire problem. Since organized fire control began in 1940, areas burned have averaged 1.2 million acres annually. The largest loss of actual record occurred in 1957 when fires swept over 5 million acres of public lands. It is…
Year: 1960
Type: Document
Source: FRAMES

Sandberg, Ottmar, Cushon
The ongoing development of sophisticated fire behavior and effects models has demonstrated the need for a comprehensive system of fuel classification that more accurately captures the structural complexity and geographic diversity of fuelbeds. The Fire and Environmental…
Year: 2001
Type: Document
Source: FRAMES, TTRS

Reinhardt, Keane, Brown
Fire effects are modeled for a variety of reasons including: to evaluate risk, to develop treatment prescriptions, to compare management options, and to understand ecosystems. Fire effects modeling may be conducted at a range of temporal and spatial scales. First-order fire…
Year: 2001
Type: Document
Source: FRAMES

Radke, Ward, Riggan
Forestry, conservation, wildfire risk reduction, and agricultural uses of planned or prescribed fires as a tool for meeting the needs of wildland managers are increasingly in collision at the air pollution control and climate change cross-roads. The inevitable conflict resulting…
Year: 2001
Type: Document
Source: FRAMES, TTRS

Potter, Martin
The University of Wisconsin-Madison produces Web-accessible, 24- and 48-hour forecasts of the Haines Index (a tool used to measure the atmospheric potential for large wildfire development) for most of North America using its nonhydrostatic modeling system. The authors examined…
Year: 2001
Type: Document
Source: FRAMES

Pietikainen, Hiukka, Fritze
Prescribed burning is known to reduce the size of the microbial biomass in soil, which is not explained by preceding clear-cutting or the effects of ash deposition. Instead, burning induces an instant heat shock in the soil, which may either directly kill soil microbes or…
Year: 2001
Type: Document
Source: FRAMES

Pietikainen, Hiukka, Fritze
The above article contained an error in the signal intensity results of the 13C CP/MAS NMR measurement (Table 2, p. 281) and in the assignment and range of the spectral regions (p. 281). The assignments of the chemical shift regions should be as follows: (1) alkyl C; (2) carbon…
Year: 2001
Type: Document
Source: FRAMES

Parsons
Description not entered.
Year: 2001
Type: Document
Source: FRAMES

Nazimova, Polikarpov, Sukhinin, Uskova, Fedotova
Details are given of a study covering part of south-central Siberia (52-56 degrees N and 89-97 degrees E). Eight different altitudinal-zonal elements (i. e. forest vegetation zones) are defined between steppe (240-260 m altitude) and subalpine tundra/taiga (1600-1800 m altitude…
Year: 2001
Type: Document
Source: FRAMES

Niemela, Chapin, Danell, Byrant
Recent efforts to project vegetation responses to climatic warming have emphasized the tight linkages between climate and vegetation distribution. Here several examples are provided which indicate that the direct effects of climatic warming on boreal vegetation can be…
Year: 2001
Type: Document
Source: FRAMES

Morgan, Hardy, Swetnam, Rollins, Long
Maps of fire frequency, severity, size, and pattern are useful for strategically planning fire and natural resource management, assessing risk and ecological conditions, illustrating change in disturbance regimes through time, identifying knowledge gaps, and learning how climate…
Year: 2001
Type: Document
Source: FRAMES

Molnar, McMinn
Basal scarring, a conspicuous abnormality of western white pine (Pinus monticola Dougl.) and its associated species in the Interior region of British Columbia, was found to be chiefly attributable to injury by bears, infections of Armillaria mellea (Vahl ex Fr.) Quel., fire,…
Year: 1960
Type: Document
Source: FRAMES