Authors
Peter Z Fulé, Thomas W Swetnam, Peter M Brown, Donald A Falk, David L Peterson, Craig D Allen, Gregory H Aplet, Mike A Battaglia, Dan Binkley, Calvin Farris, Robert E Keane, Ellis Q Margolis, Henri Grissino‐Mayer, Carol Miller, Carolyn Hull Sieg, Carl Skinner, Scott L Stephens, Alan Taylor
Publication date
2014/7
Journal
Global Ecology and Biogeography
Volume
23
Issue
7
Pages
825-830
Description
Reconstructions of dry western US forests in the late 19th century in Arizona, Colorado and Oregon based on General Land Office records were used by Williams & Baker (2012; Global Ecology and Biogeography, 21, 1042–1052; hereafter W&B) to infer past fire regimes with substantial moderate and high‐severity burning. The authors concluded that present‐day large, high‐severity fires are not distinguishable from historical patterns. We present evidence of important errors in their study. First, the use of tree size distributions to reconstruct past fire severity and extent is not supported by empirical age–size relationships nor by studies that directly quantified disturbance history in these forests. Second, the fire severity classification of W&B is qualitatively different from most modern classification schemes, and is based on different types of data, leading to an inappropriate comparison. Third, we note that while W&B …
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