Projected carbon stocks in the conterminous USA with land use and variable fire regimes
Published 2015 View Full Article
- Home
- Publications
- Publication Search
- Publication Details
Title
Projected carbon stocks in the conterminous USA with land use and variable fire regimes
Authors
Keywords
-
Journal
GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
Volume 21, Issue 12, Pages 4548-4560
Publisher
Wiley
Online
2015-07-24
DOI
10.1111/gcb.13048
References
Ask authors/readers for more resources
Related references
Note: Only part of the references are listed.- A new model to simulate climate-change impacts on forest succession for local land management
- (2015) Gabriel I. Yospin et al. ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS
- Soil depth affects simulated carbon and water in the MC2 dynamic global vegetation model
- (2014) Wendy Peterman et al. ECOLOGICAL MODELLING
- Spatially explicit modeling of 1992–2100 land cover and forest stand age for the conterminous United States
- (2013) Terry L. Sohl et al. ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS
- Evaluating atmospheric CO2inversions at multiple scales over a highly inventoried agricultural landscape
- (2013) Andrew E. Schuh et al. GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
- Evaluating theories of drought-induced vegetation mortality using a multimodel-experiment framework
- (2013) Nate G. McDowell et al. NEW PHYTOLOGIST
- Climate change and fire effects on a prairie-woodland ecotone: projecting species range shifts with a dynamic global vegetation model
- (2013) David A. King et al. Ecology and Evolution
- North American Carbon Program (NACP) regional interim synthesis: Terrestrial biospheric model intercomparison
- (2012) D.N. Huntzinger et al. ECOLOGICAL MODELLING
- Scenarios of land use and land cover change in the conterminous United States: Utilizing the special report on emission scenarios at ecoregional scales
- (2012) Benjamin M. Sleeter et al. GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS
- Modeling fire and the terrestrial carbon balance
- (2011) I. C. Prentice et al. GLOBAL BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES
- Carbon consequences of forest disturbance and recovery across the conterminous United States
- (2011) Christopher A. Williams et al. GLOBAL BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES
- The human dimension of fire regimes on Earth
- (2011) David M. J. S. Bowman et al. JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY
- Impacts of climate change on fire regimes and carbon stocks of the U.S. Pacific Northwest
- (2011) Brendan M. Rogers et al. JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH
- Simulating the impacts of disturbances on forest carbon cycling in North America: Processes, data, models, and challenges
- (2011) Shuguang Liu et al. JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH
- A Large and Persistent Carbon Sink in the World's Forests
- (2011) Y. Pan et al. SCIENCE
- Uncertainties in the 20th century carbon budget associated with land use change
- (2010) V. K. ARORA et al. GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
- Global patterns in the vulnerability of ecosystems to vegetation shifts due to climate change
- (2010) Patrick Gonzalez et al. GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY
- Drought-Induced Reduction in Global Terrestrial Net Primary Production from 2000 Through 2009
- (2010) M. Zhao et al. SCIENCE
- Conservation Threats Due to Human-Caused Increases in Fire Frequency in Mediterranean-Climate Ecosystems
- (2009) ALEXANDRA D. SYPHARD et al. CONSERVATION BIOLOGY
- A global overview of drought and heat-induced tree mortality reveals emerging climate change risks for forests
- (2009) Craig D. Allen et al. FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT
- VEMAP vs VINCERA: A DGVM sensitivity to differences in climate scenarios
- (2008) D. Bachelet et al. GLOBAL AND PLANETARY CHANGE
- Evaluation of the terrestrial carbon cycle, future plant geography and climate-carbon cycle feedbacks using five Dynamic Global Vegetation Models (DGVMs)
- (2008) S. SITCH et al. GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
- Physiographically sensitive mapping of climatological temperature and precipitation across the conterminous United States
- (2008) Christopher Daly et al. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLIMATOLOGY
Discover Peeref hubs
Discuss science. Find collaborators. Network.
Join a conversationBecome a Peeref-certified reviewer
The Peeref Institute provides free reviewer training that teaches the core competencies of the academic peer review process.
Get Started