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Apr 22 - 24 2019 PDT

Workshops, Trainings and Fieldtrips

California has been referred to as the “pyrostate.” In California’s Mediterranean-type climate, summers are warm and dry, and natural or human ignitions in the presence of flammable biomass often lead to wildfires. Many California ecosystems have close ecological and evolutionary associations with fire. The nature of these relationships varies substantially, depending on factors like the species involved, climate, history, and geography. Participants in this 3-day workshop will delve into the fire ecology of major vegetation types in the north Coast Ranges. Topics will include: fire as a physical process; fire effects on ecosystems and vegetation; fire as an evolutionary force; fire history and fire regimes (including an introduction to fire scar dendrochronology); fire geography; fire management and policy; and climate change and fire. The curriculum will include 2-3 field trips to Coast Range sites exemplifying the fire ecology of grassland, chaparral, knobcone pine, mixed evergreen, Douglas-fir and mixed conifer forest. Fire management and ecological consequences of current and projected future trends in wildfire will also be major focus areas of the field trips. The workshop will be held at the facilities of the UC Hopland Research and Extension Center, where 3000 acres of this facility were burned in the River Fire in the summer of 2018.

Topics: Fire Ecology
Regions: California