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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 The database provides a listing of fire research publications relevant to Alaska and a venue for sharing unpublished agency reports and works in progress that are not normally found in the published literature.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 26 - 50 of 65

Kennedy
The increasing prevalence of wildfire and recognition of fire (both wildland and prescribed burns) and fire surrogates as management tools reflects a need to understand wildlife response to these management actions. Although there have been several reviews on the effects of fire…
Year: 2009
Type: Project
Source: FRAMES

Knapp
This synthesis project on season of prescribed burning is to summarize results from studies to date in order to provide managers a resource for predicting fire effects and understanding what variables drive these fire effects in different areas of the country with varying fire…
Year: 2009
Type: Project
Source: FRAMES

Brooks, Bunting, Fuhlendorf, Miller
It has been over 20 years since the last major book on the ecology and management of fire was published that contained extensive information from non-forested ecosystems across western North America (Wright and Bailey 1982). During subsequent years there have been notable books…
Year: 2011
Type: Project
Source: FRAMES

Sugihara, Ingalsbee
In coordination with JFSP, the Association for Fire Ecology Congresses have been held every third year since 2000. They attract a wide variety of international contributors and attendees and is the largest and most important fire ecology and fire science conference held anywhere…
Year: 2012
Type: Project
Source: FRAMES

Morgan, Gessler, Jain, Lannom, Robichaud, Ryan
We propose a rapid response project to collect fire behavior, fire effects, and fuels data from five 2003 active 2004 wildfires across the US. It is critical that field and remotely sensed data be collected soon (two weeks to the first growing season) after wildfires are burning…
Year: 2007
Type: Project
Source: FRAMES

Rupp, Mann
Land managers face unique challenges in Alaska. Most of the boreal forest is currently managed as wilderness. Though largely free of direct human impacts, the boreal forest grows in a region that is now experiencing significant climate changes. In addition, the fire ecology of…
Year: 2009
Type: Project
Source: FRAMES

The boreal forest is the largest terrestrial ecosystem in North America, one of the least disturbed by humans, and most disturbed by fire. This combination makes it an ideal system to explore the environmental controls over species composition, the relative importance of abiotic…
Type: Project
Source: FRAMES

Both of these Chena Lakes projects were designed to determine fuel treatment effectiveness, prescribed burn severity, and post-burn vegetative succession. Incident to the sampling, some tree cross-sections were collected in 2001 to determine approximate stand ages, and in one…
Type: Project
Source: FRAMES

Camp, Omi, Cronan, Huffman
This JFSP-funded project assessed the relationship between stand age and fire behavior in the black spruce forest type of interior Alaska. Forest canopy and substrate data were collected from sites representing a time sequence of stand age ranging from two to 227 years. These…
Year: 2008
Type: Project
Source: FRAMES

A number of studies have been conducted to examine relationships between climate, fire and the growth and reproduction of dominant boreal tree species in Alaska.
Type: Project
Source: FRAMES

Three pairs of burned and recent unburned plots were established after the Noatak 2004 Uvgoon Cr (Fire #127 - A35A) to study the effects of tundra fires on vegetation and permafrost. Six plots (3 burned in 2004 and 3 'controls') were established. The goals of the study are to…
Type: Project
Source: FRAMES

The purpose of the NPS Alaska Fire Ecology Program is to understand the ecological effects of fire on the landscape. Information is collected and analyzed about the effects of fire on vegetation, fuels, soil, and wildlife habitat. Information is also collected on the fire…
Type: Project
Source: FRAMES

From 1990 to 2000 a massive outbreak of spruce beetles (Dendroctonus rufipennis) caused a die-off of spruce trees (Picea spp.) across more than 1.19 million ha of forests in Alaska. This natural disturbance was most pronounced among forests in south-central Alaska where a…
Type: Project
Source: FRAMES

This long-term monitoring project measures survival and height growth of seedlings and saplings in an area burned in the 1983 Rosie Creek Fire, near Fairbanks, Alaska. The fifteenth year of measurements occurred in 2003. All seedlings belong to the 1983, 1987, or 1990 seed crops…
Type: Project
Source: FRAMES

Sediment traps deployed in lakes within burned (4) and unburned (1) watersheds were set out to quantify charcoal deposition at the bottom of each lake. Burned lakes are all within the 2005 King County Creek fire, and the unburned lake is located to the north of the fire. The…
Type: Project
Source: FRAMES

This project is assessing the viability of using remotely-sensed imagery to detect burn severity within black spruce (Picea mariana) stands of interior Alaska through correlations of ground-truthed data (composite burn index scores) and remotely-sensed indices (differenced…
Type: Project
Source: FRAMES

Johnstone
This project aims to use data from the 2004 fires in Alaska to link pre-fire vegetation composition and soil conditions with patterns of burn severity and post-fire stand rehabilitation. The primary objective is to examine how variations in burn severity can influence patterns…
Year: 2007
Type: Project
Source: FRAMES

This study reconstructed the fire history and vegetation at a network of sites in the southcentral Brooks Range, Alaska, in order to understand how fire regimes have evolved over the past 15,000 years in relation to climate and vegetation. Lake sediment records were used to…
Type: Project
Source: FRAMES

As part of the Burned Area Emergency Rehabilitation and Stabilization plan for Alaska's 2004 fires, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the Alaska Natural Heritage Program are studying the interaction of burn severity and weed invasion in selected sites on five National…
Type: Project
Source: FRAMES

Despite the fact that high-intensity crown fires account for an overwhelming proportion of the area burned by forest fires in Canada, fully understanding and subsequently modeling the initiation, propagation, and spread of crown fires remains an elusive goal for fire research…
Type: Project
Source: FRAMES

This conference was held November 13-17, 2006, in San Diego, California. It focused on the science and technology that are the basis for the management of wildland fire. The plenary session addressed the context and consequences of changing fire regimes, while the concurrent…
Type: Project
Source: FRAMES

This conference was held in conjunction with the Fifth Symposium on Fire and Forest Meteorology, November 16-20, 2003 in Orlando, Florida. Land management agencies and organizations and private landholders are increasingly faced with the complex issues of wildland fire, such as…
Type: Project
Source: FRAMES

This conference was held November 27 - December 1, 2000, in San Diego, California. Fire research and management are greatly changing and the tasks of the fire management organizations are much broader than they were just a few years ago. Fire management is now in the forefront…
Type: Project
Source: FRAMES

Three data-intensive studies were conducted to examine the fire history of the Kenai Peninsula on three different time scales. The Kenai Peninsula has two distinct fire regimes: a high frequency regime in black spruce (Picea mariana) and a low frequency regime in white (P.…
Type: Project
Source: FRAMES

FROSTFIRE was a landscape-scale prescribed research burn in the boreal forest of interior Alaska that occurred July 8-15, 1999. Within the 2200-acre perimeter, fire mimicked natural conditions by burning 900 acres of mostly black spruce, leaving the hardwoods standing. Boreal…
Type: Project
Source: FRAMES