Authors
Clarke A Knight, Lysanna Anderson, M Jane Bunting, Marie Champagne, Rosie M Clayburn, Jeffrey N Crawford, Anna Klimaszewski-Patterson, Eric E Knapp, Frank K Lake, Scott A Mensing, David Wahl, James Wanket, Alex Watts-Tobin, Matthew D Potts, John J Battles
Publication date
2022/3/22
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
119
Issue
12
Pages
e2116264119
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
For millennia, forest ecosystems in California have been shaped by fire from both natural processes and Indigenous land management, but the notion of climatic variation as a primary controller of the pre-colonial landscape remains pervasive. Understanding the relative influence of climate and Indigenous burning on the fire regime is key because contemporary forest policy and management are informed by historical baselines. This need is particularly acute in California, where 20th-century fire suppression, coupled with a warming climate, has caused forest densification and increasingly large wildfires that threaten forest ecosystem integrity and management of the forests as part of climate mitigation efforts. We examine climatic versus anthropogenic influence on forest conditions over 3 millennia in the western Klamath Mountains—the ancestral territories of the Karuk and Yurok Tribes—by combining …
Total citations
20222023202483023
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