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Nicolás Rodríguez-Jeangros, Amanda S. Hering and John E. McCray
In recent decades, the Rocky Mountains (RM) have undergone significant changes associated with anthropogenic activities and natural disturbances. These changes have the potential to alter primary productivity and biomass carbon storage. In particular, di...
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Howard Williams, Sharon M. Hood, Christopher R. Keyes, Joel M. Egan and José Negrón
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Rebecca A. Lybrand, Rachel E. Gallery, Nicole A. Trahan and David J. P. Moore
Fire and pathogen-induced tree mortality are the two dominant forms of disturbance in Western U.S. montane forests. We investigated the consequences of both disturbance types on the controls of microbial activity in soils from 56 plots across a topograph...
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Javier E. Mercado, Beatriz Ortiz-Santana and Shannon L. Kay
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Jennifer Cartwright
Droughts and insect outbreaks are primary disturbance processes linking climate change to tree mortality in western North America. Refugia from these disturbances—locations where impacts are less severe relative to the surrounding landscape—m...
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Brenda Shepherd, Brad Jones, Robert Sissons, Jed Cochrane, Jane Park, Cyndi M. Smith and Natalie Stafl
Whitebark pine forests are declining due to infection by white pine blister rust and mountain pine beetle, combined with the effects of climate change and fire suppression. The Canadian Rocky and Columbia Mountains represent a large portion of the whiteb...
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Saskia L. Van de Gevel, Evan R. Larson and Henri D. Grissino-Mayer
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Amalesh Dhar, Lael Parrott and Christopher D.B. Hawkins
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Lorraine Maclauchlan
The impact of mountain pine beetle, Dendroctonus ponderosae Hopkins (Coleoptera: Scolytinae), is the most significant source of mortality of mature pine forests in western North America; however, in 2003-2004, high levels of mortality were observed in yo...
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J. Douglas Steventon
To assist in evaluating habitat retention options, the abundance of northern flying squirrels (Glaucomys sabrinus) and North American red squirrels (Tamiasciurus hudsonicus) wer examined in 2005 and again in 2010 across a gradient of mountain pine beetle...
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