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| Students, tribal members and others visit the study site. Photo Credit: Sarah Altemus Pope of the Southern Willamette Forest Collaborative. |
Forests on the west slope of Oregon’s Cascade Range experienced fire much more often between 1500 and 1895 than had been previously thought, according to new research by scientists at Oregon State University.
The findings provide important insight, the authors say, into how landscapes might adapt to climate change and future fire regimes.
James Johnston of the OSU College of Forestry led the study, which was published in Ecosphere.
“Wildland fire is a fundamental forest ecosystem process,” he said. “With temperatures rising and more and more area burning, we need to know as much as we can about the long-term variability in fire.”
Johnson and collaborators at Oregon State, the University of Oregon and the U.S. Forest Service gathered tree ring data at 16 sites in the southern part of the Willamette National Forest, in the general vicinity of Oakridge.
Trees form scars after cambial cells are killed by wildfire heat, he said. These scars are partially or completely covered by new tissue as a tree grows, and tree rings tell the story of when the fire exposure occurred.
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