Complex responses of birds to landscape-level fire extent, fire severity and environmental drivers
Published 2014 View Full Article
- Home
- Publications
- Publication Search
- Publication Details
Title
Complex responses of birds to landscape-level fire extent, fire severity and environmental drivers
Authors
Keywords
-
Journal
DIVERSITY AND DISTRIBUTIONS
Volume 20, Issue 4, Pages 467-477
Publisher
Wiley
Online
2014-01-29
DOI
10.1111/ddi.12172
References
Ask authors/readers for more resources
Related references
Note: Only part of the references are listed.- Connectivity Determines Post-Fire Colonisation By Open-Habitat Bird Species: The Case of the Ortolan BuntingEmberiza hortulana
- (2014) Elena L. Zozaya et al. Ardeola-International Journal of Ornithology
- Fitting and Interpreting Occupancy Models
- (2013) Alan H. Welsh et al. PLoS One
- Breed Locally, Disperse Globally: Fine-Scale Genetic Structure Despite Landscape-Scale Panmixia in a Fire-Specialist
- (2013) Jennifer C. Pierson et al. PLoS One
- Model Selection in Linear Mixed Models
- (2013) Samuel Müller et al. STATISTICAL SCIENCE
- Conceptual domain of the matrix in fragmented landscapes
- (2013) Don A. Driscoll et al. TRENDS IN ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION
- Reptile responses to fire and the risk of post-disturbance sampling bias
- (2012) Don A. Driscoll et al. BIODIVERSITY AND CONSERVATION
- Fire Mosaics and Reptile Conservation in a Fire-Prone Region
- (2012) D. G. NIMMO et al. CONSERVATION BIOLOGY
- Anatomy of a catastrophic wildfire: The Black Saturday Kilmore East fire in Victoria, Australia
- (2012) M.G. Cruz et al. FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT
- Predicting the century-long post-fire responses of reptiles
- (2012) Dale. G. Nimmo et al. GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY
- Land Management Practices Associated with House Loss in Wildfires
- (2012) Philip Gibbons et al. PLoS One
- Effects of a short fire-return interval on resources and assemblage structure of birds in a tropical savanna
- (2011) LEONIE E. VALENTINE et al. AUSTRAL ECOLOGY
- Landscape-scale effects of fire on bird assemblages: does pyrodiversity beget biodiversity?
- (2011) Rick S. Taylor et al. DIVERSITY AND DISTRIBUTIONS
- Fire severity has mixed benefits to breeding bird species in the southern Appalachians
- (2011) Scott Rush et al. FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT
- Recent fire history and connectivity patterns determine bird species distribution dynamics in landscapes dominated by land abandonment
- (2011) Elena L. Zozaya et al. LANDSCAPE ECOLOGY
- Bird responses to fire severity and time since fire in managed mountain rangelands
- (2010) P. Pons et al. ANIMAL CONSERVATION
- Fire management for biodiversity conservation: Key research questions and our capacity to answer them
- (2010) Don A. Driscoll et al. BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION
- Modeling species co-occurrence by multivariate logistic regression generates new hypotheses on fungal interactions
- (2010) Otso Ovaskainen et al. ECOLOGY
- The forgotten stage of forest succession: early-successional ecosystems on forest sites
- (2010) Mark E Swanson et al. FRONTIERS IN ECOLOGY AND THE ENVIRONMENT
- THE ECOLOGICAL IMPORTANCE OF SEVERE WILDFIRES: SOME LIKE IT HOT
- (2009) Richard L. Hutto ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS
- Do observer differences in bird detection affect inferences from large-scale ecological studies?
- (2009) David B. Lindenmayer et al. EMU
- Are gullies best for biodiversity? An empirical examination of Australian wet forest types
- (2009) D.B. Lindenmayer et al. FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT
- What factors influence rapid post-fire site re-occupancy? A case study of the endangered Eastern Bristlebird in eastern Australia
- (2009) David B. Lindenmayer et al. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF WILDLAND FIRE
- Fire intensity, fire severity and burn severity: a brief review and suggested usage
- (2009) Jon E. Keeley INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF WILDLAND FIRE
- Fire in the Earth System
- (2009) D. M. J. S. Bowman et al. SCIENCE
- Testing the assumptions of chronosequences in succession
- (2008) Edward A. Johnson et al. ECOLOGY LETTERS
- Breeding bird community composition in different successional vegetation in the montane coniferous forests zone of Taiwan
- (2008) Tzung-Su Ding et al. FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT
- Wildfires and the expansion of threatened farmland birds: the ortolan buntingEmberiza hortulanain Mediterranean landscapes
- (2008) Llus Brotons et al. JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY
Discover Peeref hubs
Discuss science. Find collaborators. Network.
Join a conversationCreate your own webinar
Interested in hosting your own webinar? Check the schedule and propose your idea to the Peeref Content Team.
Create Now