Fire effects 10 years after the Anaktuvuk River Tundra fire
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- Publication date
- 2021
- Topics
- Fire ecology -- Alaska, Tundras -- Effect of fires on -- Alaska, Plant communities -- Effect of fires on -- Alaska -- Measurement, Fire ecology, Plant communities -- Measurement, Tundras, Arctic regions -- Effect of fires on -- Alaska, Anaktuvuk River Tundra (Alaska), Alaska, Arctic Regions
- Publisher
- Anchorage, Alaska : U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Land Management
- Collection
- blmlibrary; fedlink; americana
- Contributor
- Bureau of Land Management Library
- Language
- English
1 online resource (4, iv, 46 pages) :
"An interdisciplinary team assessed fire effects including burn severity, potential plant community shifts, and effects on permafrost and active layers between 2008 and 2017. Observers monumented, photographed, and measured 24 burned and 17 unburned reference transects for four years, starting the year after the fire...Since the 2017 field work was only able to monitor the BLM's transects, this report details the results from those 25 transects (Fig 2). We also collected survey-grade GPS locations for each of the benchmarks visited. In 2017, we found new opportunities to expand our understanding of fire's ecological effects on this arctic ecosystem ..."--Page 5
Description based on online resource; title from PDF cover (BLM, viewed June 28, 2021)
Includes bibliographical references (pages 38-41)
Cover title
"April 2021"--Page 3
"An interdisciplinary team assessed fire effects including burn severity, potential plant community shifts, and effects on permafrost and active layers between 2008 and 2017. Observers monumented, photographed, and measured 24 burned and 17 unburned reference transects for four years, starting the year after the fire...Since the 2017 field work was only able to monitor the BLM's transects, this report details the results from those 25 transects (Fig 2). We also collected survey-grade GPS locations for each of the benchmarks visited. In 2017, we found new opportunities to expand our understanding of fire's ecological effects on this arctic ecosystem ..."--Page 5
Description based on online resource; title from PDF cover (BLM, viewed June 28, 2021)
Includes bibliographical references (pages 38-41)
Cover title
"April 2021"--Page 3
Notes
online
- Addeddate
- 2021-07-22 15:19:42
- Associated-names
- Miller, Eric A. (Fire ecologist); Jones, Benjamin N; United States. Bureau of Land Management. Alaska State Office
- Betterpdf
- TRUE
- Bib_id
- on1257821519
- Foldoutcount
- 0
- Identifier
- fireeffects10yea00jand
- Identifier-ark
- ark:/13960/t3331xv5r
- Invoice
- 87
- Ocr
- tesseract 5.0.0-alpha-20201231-10-g1236
- Ocr_detected_lang
- en
- Ocr_detected_lang_conf
- 1.0000
- Ocr_detected_script
- Latin
- Ocr_detected_script_conf
- 1.0000
- Ocr_module_version
- 0.0.13
- Ocr_parameters
- -l eng
- Page-progression
- lr
- Page_number_confidence
- 83.02
- Pages
- 54
- Physical_count
- HD-U-6
- Ppi
- 300
- Scandate
- 20210721
- Scanningcenter
- indiana
- Full catalog record
- MARCXML
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