20 results on '"Robles, Marcos D."'
Search Results
2. Large-scale forest restoration stabilizes carbon under climate change in Southwest United States
- Author
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McCauley, Lisa A., Robles, Marcos D., Woolley, Travis, Marshall, Robert M., Kretchun, Alec, and Gori, David F.
- Published
- 2019
3. How three-dimensional forest structure regulates the amount and timing of snowmelt across a climatic gradient of snow persistence.
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Dwivedi, Ravindra, Biederman, Joel A., Broxton, Patrick D., Pearl, Jessie K., Kangsan Lee, Svoma, Bohumil M., van Leeuwen, Willem J. D., and Robles, Marcos D.
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FORESTS & forestry ,SNOWMELT ,CLIMATE change ,PLANT canopies ,WATER supply - Abstract
Across the western United States, forests are changing rapidly, with uncertain impacts on snowmelt water resources. Snow partitioning is controlled by forest effects on interception, radiation, and sublimation. Yet, models often lack snow measurements with sufficiently high spatial and temporal resolution across gradients of forest structure to accurately represent these fine-scale processes. Here, we utilize four Snowtography stations in Arizona, in the lower Colorado River Basin, with daily measurements over 3-5 years at ~110 positions distributed across gradients of forest structure resulting from wildfires and mechanical thinning. We combine Snowtography with lidar snapshots of forest and snow to train a high-resolution snow model and run it for 6 years to quantify how forest structure regulates snowpack and snowmelt. These study sites represent a climate gradient from lower/warmer ephemeral snowpack (~2,100 m asl) to higher/colder seasonal snowpack (~2,800 m asl). Forest cover reduced snowpack and snowmelt through canopy sublimation. Forest advanced snowmelt timing at lower/warmer sites but delayed it at higher/colder sites. Within canopy gaps, shaded cool edges had the greatest peak snow water equivalent (SWE). Surprisingly, sunny/warm gap edges produced more snowmelt than cool edges, because high radiation melted snow quickly, reducing exposure to sublimation. Therefore, peak SWE is not an ideal proxy for snowmelt volume from ephemeral snowpacks, which are becoming more prevalent due to warming. The results imply that forest management can influence the amount and timing of snowmelt, and that there may be decision trade-offs between enhancing forest resilience through delayed snowmelt and maximizing snowmelt volumes for downstream water resources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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4. Enduring a decade of drought: Patterns and drivers of vegetation change in a semi-arid grassland
- Author
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Bodner, Gitanjali S. and Robles, Marcos D.
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- 2017
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5. Plant-Soil Interactions in Temperate Grasslands
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Burke, Ingrid C., Lauenroth, William K., Vinton, Mary Ann, Hook, Paul B., Kelly, Robin H., Epstein, Howard E., Aguiar, Martin R., Robles, Marcos D., Aguilera, Manuel O., Murphy, Kenneth L., and Gill, Richard A.
- Published
- 1998
6. Legume, Grass, and Conservation Reserve Program Effects on Soil Organic Matter Recovery
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Robles, Marcos D. and Burke, Ingrid C.
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- 1997
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7. The Geography of Private Forests That Support At-Risk Species in the Conterminous United States
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Robles, Marcos D., Flather, Curtis H., Stein, Susan M., Nelson, Mark D., and Cutko, Andrew
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- 2008
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8. Reduced fire severity offers near-term buffer to climate-driven declines in conifer resilience across the western United States.
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Davis, Kimberley T., Robles, Marcos D., Kemp, Kerry B., Higuera, Philip E., Chapman, Teresa, Metlen, Kerry L., Peeler, Jamie L., Rodman, Kyle C., Woolley, Travis, Addington, Robert N., Buma, Brian J., Cansler, C. Alina, Case, Michael J., Collins, Brandon M., Coop, Jonathan D., Dobrowski, Solomon Z., Gill, Nathan S., Haffey, Collin, Harris, Lucas B., and Harvey, Brian J.
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FIRE management , *CONIFERS , *CLIMATE change - Abstract
Increasing fire severity and warmer, drier postfire conditions are making forests in the western United States (West) vulnerable to ecological transformation. Yet, the relative importance of and interactions between these drivers of forest change remain unresolved, particularly over upcoming decades. Here, we assess how the interactive impacts of changing climate and wildfire activity influenced conifer regeneration after 334 wildfires, using a dataset of postfire conifer regeneration from 10,230 field plots. Our findings highlight declining regeneration capacity across the West over the past four decades for the eight dominant conifer species studied. Postfire regeneration is sensitive to high-severity fire, which limits seed availability, and postfire climate, which influences seedling establishment. In the near-term, projected differences in recruitment probability between low- and high-severity fire scenarios were larger than projected climate change impacts for most species, suggesting that reductions in fire severity, and resultant impacts on seed availability, could partially offset expected climate-driven declines in postfire regeneration. Across 40 to 42% of the study area, we project postfire conifer regeneration to be likely following low-severity but not high-severity fire under future climate scenarios (2031 to 2050). However, increasingly warm, dry climate conditions are projected to eventually outweigh the influence of fire severity and seed availability. The percent of the study area considered unlikely to experience conifer regeneration, regardless of fire severity, increased from 5% in 1981 to 2000 to 26 to 31% by mid-century, highlighting a limited time window over which management actions that reduce fire severity may effectively support postfire conifer regeneration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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9. Streamflow Response to Wildfire Differs With Season and Elevation in Adjacent Headwaters of the Lower Colorado River Basin.
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Biederman, Joel A., Robles, Marcos D., Scott, Russell L., and Knowles, John F.
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WATERSHEDS ,SNOWMELT ,WATER supply management ,FORESTED wetlands ,WILDFIRES ,FOREST management ,FOREST fires ,STREAMFLOW - Abstract
Fires increasingly impact forested watersheds, with uncertain water resources impacts. While research has revealed higher peak flows, longer‐term yields may increase or decrease following fire, and the mechanisms regulating post‐fire streamflow are little explored. Hydrologic response to disturbance is poorly understood in the Lower Colorado River Basin (LCRB), where snowmelt often occurs before the growing season. Here, we quantify annual streamflow changes following what have been, before 2020, two of the largest wildfires in the modern history of the contiguous United States. We evaluate nine nested watersheds with >50 years records within the Salt River Basin to evaluate fire impact over ranges of elevation, climate, vegetation, burned area, and spatial scale. We employ double‐mass comparison of paired watersheds, pre‐ and post‐fire runoff ratio comparison, multiple linear regression of climate and fire, and time‐trend analysis. Precipitation and streamflow are decoupled during dry periods; therefore we conduct separate change detection for wet and dry periods. Post‐fire summer streamflow increased by 24%–38% at all elevations. While winter/spring streamflow remained constant in the highest, coldest headwaters, winter flows declined in lower‐elevation headwaters. As a result, basin annual streamflow declined. These results support emerging understanding that warm semiarid watersheds respond differently to disturbance than well‐studied, colder watersheds. Asynchrony between winter snowmelt and summer evaporative demand is likely important when considering long‐term impacts of forest management and disturbance on water supply in the LCRB. Plain Language Summary: Wildfire is increasingly common and severe in many of the forested watersheds important for water supplies. Following fire, there is an increased risk of short‐term flooding. However, we do not understand how wildfire changes the amount of water flowing out of a watershed over multiple years. Although wildfire leaves fewer trees to take up water, it also destroys the shade from sun and wind which protects snowpack and soil moisture from evaporation. Here, we made side‐by‐side comparisons and before‐after comparisons to determine wildfire impacts on the multiyear streamflow from nine watersheds of the Salt River Basin in Arizona. We found that streamflow increased in summer. While the much larger winter/spring streamflow did not change much at high elevations, it declined in lower‐elevation watersheds following fire. One reason for this difference might be that at high elevation, the snow melts at the start of the summer growing season, when trees are likely to take up the water. Wildfire reduces trees and thereby increases streamflow. At lower elevations, snow melts much earlier in the year, when trees are not active, making the water savings from burned forests less important. These results suggest that lower, warmer forested watersheds may produce less streamflow following wildfire. Key Points: Summer streamflow increased in headwaters at all elevations following fireDominant winter/spring streamflow was unchanged in higher/colder headwaters but decreased in lower/warmer headwatersClimatological asynchrony of snowmelt and transpiration in warmer watersheds may reduce streamflow benefits of fire [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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10. Tree mortality response to drought‐density interactions suggests opportunities to enhance drought resistance.
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Bradford, John. B., Shriver, Robert K., Robles, Marcos D., McCauley, Lisa A., Woolley, Travis J., Andrews, Caitlin A., Crimmins, Michael, and Bell, David M.
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DROUGHT management ,TREE mortality ,DROUGHTS ,FOREST management ,TROPICAL dry forests ,SOIL moisture ,SOIL temperature - Abstract
The future of dry forests around the world is uncertain given predictions that rising temperatures and enhanced aridity will increase drought‐induced tree mortality. Using forest management and ecological restoration to reduce density and competition for water offers one of the few pathways that forests managers can potentially minimize drought‐induced tree mortality. Competition for water during drought leads to elevated tree mortality in dense stands, although the influence of density on heat‐induced stress and the durations of hot or dry conditions that most impact mortality remain unclear.Understanding how competition interacts with hot‐drought stress is essential to recognize how, where and how much reducing density can help sustain dry forests in a rapidly changing world. Here, we integrated repeat measurements of 28,881 ponderosa pine trees across the western US (2000–2017) with soil moisture estimates from a water balance model to examine how annual mortality responds to competition, temperature and soil moisture conditions.Tree mortality responded most strongly to basal area, and was elevated in places with high mean temperatures, unusually hot 7‐year high temperature anomalies, and unusually dry 8‐year low soil moisture anomalies. Mortality was also lower in places that experienced unusually wet 3‐year soil moisture anomalies between measurements. Importantly, we found that basal area interacts with temperature and soil moisture, exacerbating mortality during times of stress imposed by high temperature or low moisture.Synthesis and applications. Our results imply that a 50% reduction in forest basal area could reduce drought‐driven tree mortality by 20%–80%. The largest impacts of density reduction are seen in areas with high current basal area and places that experience high temperatures and/or severe multiyear droughts. These interactions between competition and drought are critical to understand past and future patterns of tree mortality in the context of climate change, and provide information for resource managers seeking to enhance dry forest drought resistance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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11. Tamm review: A meta-analysis of thinning, prescribed fire, and wildfire effects on subsequent wildfire severity in conifer dominated forests of the Western US.
- Author
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Davis, Kimberley T., Peeler, Jamie, Fargione, Joseph, Haugo, Ryan D., Metlen, Kerry L., Robles, Marcos D., and Woolley, Travis
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FUEL reduction (Wildfire prevention) ,WILDFIRE prevention ,CONIFEROUS forests ,WILDFIRES ,FIRE weather ,SCIENTIFIC literature ,TREATMENT effectiveness - Abstract
Increased understanding of how mechanical thinning, prescribed burning, and wildfire affect subsequent wildfire severity is urgently needed as people and forests face a growing wildfire crisis. In response, we reviewed scientific literature for the US West and completed a meta-analysis that answered three questions: (1) How much do treatments reduce wildfire severity within treated areas? (2) How do the effects vary with treatment type, treatment age, and forest type? (3) How does fire weather moderate the effects of treatments? We found overwhelming evidence that mechanical thinning with prescribed burning, mechanical thinning with pile burning, and prescribed burning only are effective at reducing subsequent wildfire severity, resulting in reductions in severity between 62% and 72% relative to untreated areas. In comparison, thinning only was less effective – underscoring the importance of treating surface fuels when mitigating wildfire severity is the management goal. The efficacy of these treatments did not vary among forest types assessed in this study and was high across a range of fire weather conditions. Prior wildfire had more complex impacts on subsequent wildfire severity, which varied with forest type and initial wildfire severity. Across treatment types, we found that effectiveness of treatments declined over time, with the mean reduction in wildfire severity decreasing more than twofold when wildfire occurred greater than 10 years after initial treatment. Our meta-analysis provides up-to-date information on the extent to which active forest management reduces wildfire severity and facilitates better outcomes for people and forests during future wildfire events. • Forest treatments that reduce surface fuels decrease subsequent wildfire severity. • Thinning with prescribed burning was the most effective and persistent treatment. • Treatment efficacy for reducing wildfire severity declined for older treatments. • Prior low or moderate severity wildfire can reduce subsequent wildfire severity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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12. Landscape‐scale restoration minimizes tree growth vulnerability to 21st century drought in a dry forest.
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Bradford, John B., Andrews, Caitlin M., Robles, Marcos D., McCauley, Lisa A., Woolley, Travis J., and Marshall, Robert M.
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TROPICAL dry forests ,FOREST management ,FOREST declines ,FOREST restoration ,COMMUNITY forests ,TREE growth ,MICROWAVE drying - Abstract
Increasing aridity is a challenge for forest managers and reducing stand density to minimize competition is a recognized strategy to mitigate drought impacts on growth. In many dry forests, the most widespread and common forest management programs currently being implemented focus on restoration of historical stand structures, primarily to minimize fire risk and enhance watershed function. The implications of these restoration projects for drought vulnerability are not well understood. Here, we examined how planned restoration treatments in the Four Forests Restoration Initiative, the largest forest restoration project in the United States, would alter landscape‐scale patterns of forest growth and drought vulnerability throughout the 21st century. Using drought–growth relationships developed within the landscape, we considered a suite of climate and treatment scenarios and estimated average forest growth and the proportion of years with extremely low growth as a measure of vulnerability to long‐term decline. Climatic shifts projected for this landscape include higher temperatures and shifting seasonal precipitation that promotes lower soil moisture availability in the early growing season and greater hot‐dry stress, conditions negatively associated with tree growth. However, drought severity and the magnitude of future growth declines were moderated by the thinning treatments. Compared to historical conditions, proportional growth in mid‐century declines by ~40% if thinning ceases or continues at the status quo pace. By comparison, proportional growth declines by only 20% if the Four Forest Restoration Initiative treatments are fully implemented, and <10% if stands are thinned even more intensively than currently planned. Furthermore, restoration treatments resulted in dramatically fewer years with extremely low growth in the future, a recognized precursor to forest decline and eventual tree mortality. Benefits from density reduction for mitigating drought‐induced growth declines are more apparent in mid‐century and under RCP4.5 than under RCP8.5 at the end of the century. Future climate is inherently uncertain, and our results only reflect the climate projections from the representative suite of models examined. Nevertheless, these results indicate that forest restoration projects designed for other objectives also have substantial benefits for minimizing future drought vulnerability in dry forests and provide additional incentive to accelerate the pace of restoration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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13. A century of changing flows: Forest management changed flow magnitudes and warming advanced the timing of flow in a southwestern US river.
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Robles, Marcos D., Turner, Dale S., and Haney, Jeanmarie A.
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FOREST management , *ECOSYSTEM management , *BIOTIC communities , *DROUGHTS , *SNOWPACK augmentation - Abstract
The continued provision of water from rivers in the southwestern United States to downstream cities, natural communities and species is at risk due to higher temperatures and drought conditions in recent decades. Snowpack and snowfall levels have declined, snowmelt and peak spring flows are arriving earlier, and summer flows have declined. Concurrent to climate change and variation, a century of fire suppression has resulted in dramatic changes to forest conditions, and yet, few studies have focused on determining the degree to which changing forests have altered flows. In this study, we evaluated changes in flow, climate, and forest conditions in the Salt River in central Arizona from 1914–2012 to compare and evaluate the effects of changing forest conditions and temperatures on flows. After using linear regression models to remove the influence of precipitation and temperature, we estimated that annual flows declined by 8–29% from 1914–1963, coincident with a 2-fold increase in basal area, a 2-3-fold increase in canopy cover, and at least a 10-fold increase in forest density within ponderosa pine forests. Streamflow volumes declined by 37–56% in summer and fall months during this period. Declines in climate-adjusted flows reversed at mid-century when spring and annual flows increased by 10–31% from 1964–2012, perhaps due to more winter rainfall. Additionally, peak spring flows occurred about 12 days earlier in this period than in the previous period, coincident with winter and spring temperatures that increased by 1–2°C. While uncertainties remain, this study adds to the knowledge gained in other regions that forest change has had effects on flow that were on par with climate variability and, in the case of mid-century declines, well before the influence of anthropogenic warming. Current large-scale forest restoration projects hold some promise of recovering seasonal flows. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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14. Correction: A century of changing flows: Forest management changed flow magnitudes and warming advanced the timing of flow in a southwestern US river.
- Author
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Robles, Marcos D., Turner, Dale S., and Haney, Jeanmarie A.
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- *
FOREST management & the environment , *STREAMFLOW , *RIVERS - Published
- 2018
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15. Effects of Climate Variability and Accelerated Forest Thinning on Watershed-Scale Runoff in Southwestern USA Ponderosa Pine Forests.
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Robles, Marcos D., Marshall, Robert M., O'Donnell, Frances, Smith, Edward B., Haney, Jeanmarie A., and Gori, David F.
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CLIMATE change , *FOREST thinning , *FOREST density , *WATERSHEDS , *RUNOFF , *PONDEROSA pine - Abstract
The recent mortality of up to 20% of forests and woodlands in the southwestern United States, along with declining stream flows and projected future water shortages, heightens the need to understand how management practices can enhance forest resilience and functioning under unprecedented scales of drought and wildfire. To address this challenge, a combination of mechanical thinning and fire treatments are planned for 238,000 hectares (588,000 acres) of ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa) forests across central Arizona, USA. Mechanical thinning can increase runoff at fine scales, as well as reduce fire risk and tree water stress during drought, but the effects of this practice have not been studied at scales commensurate with recent forest disturbances or under a highly variable climate. Modifying a historical runoff model, we constructed scenarios to estimate increases in runoff from thinning ponderosa pine at the landscape and watershed scales based on driving variables: pace, extent and intensity of forest treatments and variability in winter precipitation. We found that runoff on thinned forests was about 20% greater than unthinned forests, regardless of whether treatments occurred in a drought or pluvial period. The magnitude of this increase is similar to observed declines in snowpack for the region, suggesting that accelerated thinning may lessen runoff losses due to warming effects. Gains in runoff were temporary (six years after treatment) and modest when compared to mean annual runoff from the study watersheds (0–3%). Nonetheless gains observed during drought periods could play a role in augmenting river flows on a seasonal basis, improving conditions for water-dependent natural resources, as well as benefit water supplies for downstream communities. Results of this study and others suggest that accelerated forest thinning at large scales could improve the water balance and resilience of forests and sustain the ecosystem services they provide. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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16. Landscape-scale forest restoration decreases vulnerability to drought mortality under climate change in southwest USA ponderosa forest.
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McCauley, Lisa A., Bradford, John.B., Robles, Marcos D., Shriver, Robert K., Woolley, Travis J., and Andrews, Caitlin A.
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FOREST restoration ,CLIMATE change ,TREE mortality ,PONDEROSA pine ,DROUGHTS ,TROPICAL dry forests - Abstract
• Dry western US forests are at risk of large-scale tree die-offs due to hot-drought. • We modeled forest restoration effects on future ponderosa pine drought mortality. • Without thinning, mortality will increase 45–57% over current rates by mid-century. • With thinning, mid-century mortality rates remain near or below contemporary rates. • Lower tree density can mitigate the effects of climate change on drought mortality. Drought-induced tree mortality is predicted to increase in dry forests across the globe as future projections show hotter, drier climates. This could potentially result in large-scale tree die-offs, changes in species composition, and loss of forest ecosystem services, including carbon storage. While some studies have found that forest stands with greater basal areas (BA) have higher drought mortality, many have not evaluated the extent to which forests restored to lower densities via restoration activities affect drought mortality. The southwestern USA is particularly susceptible to tree mortality due to the predicted increases in temperature, drier soils, and forests with high density. Our objective was to evaluate how ponderosa pine mortality is expected to be influenced by the Four Forests Restoration Initiative (4FRI), a large-scale forest restoration effort ongoing in northern Arizona, USA, that will reduce stand BA by approximately 40%. Specifically, we modeled drought mortality in three time periods, one contemporary (1970–2010), and two future (2020–2059 and 2060–2099) under three restoration scenarios: no thinning, 4FRI thinning, and a BA reduction beyond the 4FRI plan (4FRI-intensive). We estimated mortality using 11 climate models under two emissions scenarios. Without thinning, our model predicted that by mid-century (2020–2059), changes in climate could increase annual ponderosa pine mortality rates by 45–57% over contemporary rates. However, with thinning, mid-century mortality was predicted to remain near or below contemporary rates and these rates are 31–35% (4FRI) and 46–51% (4FRI-intensive) less than the mid-century scenarios without thinning. Our study shows that while climate change is likely to increase tree mortality rates, large-scale forest restoration projects, such as 4FRI, have the potential to ameliorate the effects of climate change and keep mortality rates near contemporary levels for decades. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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17. Sustainable Water Management in the Southwestern United States: Reality or Rhetoric?
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Marshall, Robert M., Robles, Marcos D., Majka, Daniel R., and Haney, Jeanmarie A.
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FRESH water , *WATER supply , *GROUNDWATER , *WATERSHEDS , *RIVERS , *STREAMFLOW , *WATER management , *POPULATION - Abstract
Background: While freshwater sustainability is generally defined as the provisioning of water for both people and the environment, in practice it is largely focused only on supplying water to furnish human population growth. Symptomatic of this is the state of Arizona, where rapid growth outside of the metropolitan Phoenix-Tucson corridor relies on the same groundwater that supplies year-round flow in rivers. Using Arizona as a case study, we present the first study in the southwestern United States that evaluates the potential impact of future population growth and water demand on streamflow depletion across multiple watersheds. Methodology/Principal Findings: We modeled population growth and water demand through 2050 and used four scenarios to explore the potential effects of alternative growth and water management strategies on river flows. Under the base population projection, we found that rivers in seven of the 18 study watersheds could be dewatered due to municipal demand. Implementing alternative growth and water management strategies, however, could prevent four of these rivers from being dewatered. Conclusions/Significance: The window of opportunity to implement water management strategies is narrowing. Because impacts from groundwater extraction are cumulative and cannot be immediately reversed, proactive water management strategies should be implemented where groundwater will be used to support new municipal demand. Our approach provides a low-cost method to identify where alternative water and growth management strategies may have the most impact, and demonstrates that such strategies can maintain a continued water supply for both people and the environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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18. Soil organic matter recovery on Conservation Reserve Program fields in southwestern Wyoming.
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Robles, Marcos D. and Burke, Ingrid C.
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- *
TILLAGE , *HUMUS - Abstract
Presents a study which tested the hypothesis, that returning cultivated fields in southwestern Wyoming, to perennial grasses through the Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) would increase labile pools of soil organic matter (SOM) and small-scale heterogeneity of SOM. Methodology used to conduct study; How the potential effects of CRP on soils in dryland wheat-flow areas was addressed; What study's findings suggested.
- Published
- 1998
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19. Winter Inputs Buffer Streamflow Sensitivity to Snowpack Losses in the Salt River Watershed in the Lower Colorado River Basin.
- Author
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Robles, Marcos D., Hammond, John C., Kampf, Stephanie K., Biederman, Joel A., and Demaria, Eleonora M. C.
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WATERSHEDS ,STREAMFLOW ,SNOWMELT ,HUMIDITY ,ATMOSPHERIC rivers ,SNOW accumulation - Abstract
Recent streamflow declines in the Upper Colorado River Basin raise concerns about the sensitivity of water supply for 40 million people to rising temperatures. Yet, other studies in western US river basins present a paradox: streamflow has not consistently declined with warming and snow loss. A potential explanation for this lack of consistency is warming-induced production of winter runoff when potential evaporative losses are low. This mechanism is more likely in basins at lower elevations or latitudes with relatively warm winter temperatures and intermittent snowpacks. We test whether this accounts for streamflow patterns in nine gaged basins of the Salt River and its tributaries, which is a sub-basin in the Lower Colorado River Basin (LCRB). We develop a basin-scale model that separates snow and rainfall inputs and simulates snow accumulation and melt using temperature, precipitation, and relative humidity. Despite significant warming from 1968–2011 and snow loss in many of the basins, annual and seasonal streamflow did not decline. Between 25% and 50% of annual streamflow is generated in winter (NDJF) when runoff ratios are generally higher and potential evapotranspiration losses are one-third of potential losses in spring (MAMJ). Sub-annual streamflow responses to winter inputs were larger and more efficient than spring and summer responses and their frequencies and magnitudes increased in 1968–2011 compared to 1929–1967. In total, 75% of the largest winter events were associated with atmospheric rivers, which can produce large cool-season streamflow peaks. We conclude that temperature-induced snow loss in this LCRB sub-basin was moderated by enhanced winter hydrological inputs and streamflow production. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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20. Tamm review: The effects of prescribed fire on wildfire regimes and impacts: A framework for comparison.
- Author
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Hunter, Molly E. and Robles, Marcos D.
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PRESCRIBED burning ,FIRE management ,FIRE ,SCIENTIFIC literature ,WILDFIRES ,FIRE ecology ,HABITATS ,ECOSYSTEM dynamics - Abstract
• Prescribed fire and wildfire tradeoffs should be addressed at broad scales. • Prescribed fire can reduce the incidence, extent, and severity of wildfires. • In some cases, prescribed fire can increase the cumulative amount of fire over time. • Research is needed on the implications of tradeoffs for ecosystems and society. Prescribed fire can result in significant benefits to ecosystems and society. Examples include improved wildlife habitat, enhanced biodiversity, reduced threat of destructive wildfire, and enhanced ecosystem resilience. Prescribed fire can also come with costs, such as reduced air quality and impacts to fire sensitive species. To plan for appropriate use of prescribed fire, managers need information on the tradeoffs between prescribed fire and wildfire regimes. In this study, we argue that information on tradeoffs should be presented at spatial and temporal scales commensurate with the scales at which these processes occur and that simulation modeling exercises should include some realistic measure of wildfire probability. To that end, we synthesized available scientific literature on relationships between prescribed fire and wildfire regimes, and their associated ecological and societal effects, focusing specifically on simulation modeling studies that consider wildfire probability and empirical and modeling studies that consider prescribed fire and wildfire regimes at spatial and temporal scales beyond individual events. Both empirical and modeling studies overwhelmingly show that increasing use of prescribed fire can result in wildfire regimes of lower extent and intensity. In some studies, a consequence associated with increased use of prescribed fire is an increase in the total, cumulative amount of fire on a landscape over time. Presumably this has implications for emissions and ecosystem carbon, however, effects on ecosystem carbon dynamics are much less clear as results vary considerably across studies. Results likely vary because studies use various landscape models with different parameter settings for processes (e.g., vegetation succession) and use different methodologies, time frames, and fire management and climate change scenarios. Future syntheses and meta-analyses would benefit from researchers providing more comprehensive and transparent documentation of model parameters, assumptions, and limitations. The literature review also revealed that studies on the implications of prescribed fire and wildfire regimes with regard to values other than carbon and emissions are scant and this represents a critical research need. Empirical studies are needed to calibrate and provide magnitude of order comparisons with simulation models and address tradeoffs with respect to other values (e.g., wildland urban interface, wildlife habitat). Such studies should be conducted with consideration for our framework, which includes the implications of prescribed fire and wildfire across broad spatial and temporal scales. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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