Abstract
Context: More than a century of forest and fire management of Inland Pacific landscapes has transformed their successional and disturbance dynamics. Regional connectivity of many terrestrial and aquatic habitats is fragmented, flows of some ecological and physical processes have been altered in space and time, and the frequency, size and intensity of many disturbances that configure these habitats have been altered. Current efforts to address these impacts yield a small footprint in comparison to wildfires and insect outbreaks. Moreover, many current projects emphasize thinning and fuels reduction within individual forest stands, while overlooking large-scale habitat connectivity and disturbance flow issues. Methods: We provide a framework for landscape restoration, offering seven principles. We discuss their implication for management, and illustrate their application with examples. Results: Historical forests were spatially heterogeneous at multiple scales. Heterogeneity was the result of variability and interactions among native ecological patterns and processes, including successional and disturbance processes regulated by climatic and topographic drivers. Native flora and fauna were adapted to these conditions, which conferred a measure of resilience to variability in climate and recurrent contagious disturbances. Conclusions: To restore key characteristics of this resilience to current landscapes, planning and management are needed at ecoregion, local landscape, successional patch, and tree neighborhood scales. Restoration that works effectively across ownerships and allocations will require active thinking about landscapes as socio-ecological systems that provide services to people within the finite capacities of ecosystems. We focus attention on landscape-level prescriptions as foundational to restoration planning and execution.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 1805-1835 |
| Number of pages | 31 |
| Journal | Landscape Ecology |
| Volume | 30 |
| Issue number | 10 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - Dec 1 2015 |
Funding
The authors thank Keith Reynolds, Cameron Thomas, Richy Harrod, Rachel White, and the anonymous reviewers for helpful reviews. We thank James Pass and the staff from the Three Rivers Ranger District on the Colville NF for working with us on the landscape evaluation and prescription for the Orient Watershed. We also thank the PNW, Rocky Mountain, and PSW Research Stations, the Joint Fire Sciences Program, National Science Foundation (Award #1256819), and the National Fire Plan for generous support of the many research studies synthesized in this review.
| Funder number |
|---|
| 1256819 |
UN SDGs
This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
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SDG 13 Climate Action
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SDG 15 Life on Land
Keywords
- Forest and rangeland restoration
- Hierarchical organization
- Large fires
- Patch size distributions
- Successional patches
- Topographic controls
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