Springer Nature
Browse
13717_2020_243_MOESM1_ESM.pdf (2.78 MB)

Additional file 1 of Large-diameter trees dominate snag and surface biomass following reintroduced fire

Download (2.78 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2020-07-27, 04:07 authored by James A. Lutz, Soren Struckman, Tucker J. Furniss, C. Alina Cansler, Sara J. Germain, Larissa L. Yocom, Darren J. McAvoy, Crystal A. Kolden, Alistair M. S. Smith, Mark E. Swanson, Andrew J. Larson
Additional file 1: Table S1. Yearly totals of trees, snags, and deadwood for the Yosemite Forest Dynamics Plot including recruitment, two different categories of mortality (transitions of trees to the snag pool and transitions of trees directly to the surface deadwood pool) and snagfall (transition of a snag to the surface deadwood pool). Dead trees ≥1.37 m tall are classified as snags. Dead trees with a remaining stump height <1.37 m tall are classed as deadwood. Fig. S1. Deadwood ≥10 cm diameter from 2013 and earlier that persisted through fire in the Yosemite Forest Dynamics Plot. ABCO – Abies concolor, ABMA – Abies magnifica, CADE – Calocedrus decurrens, CONU – Cornus nuttallii, PILA – Pinus lambertiana, PSME – Pseudotsuga menziesii, QUKE – Quercus kelloggii, UNKN – Unknown. Fig. S2. New deadwood ≥10 cm diameter from 2014 in the Yosemite Forest Dynamics Plot. ABCO – Abies concolor, ABMA – Abies magnifica, CADE – Calocedrus decurrens, CONU – Cornus nuttallii, PILA – Pinus lambertiana, PSME – Pseudotsuga menziesii, QUKE – Quercus kelloggii, UNKN – Unknown. Fig. S3. New deadwood ≥10 cm diameter from 2015 in the Yosemite Forest Dynamics Plot. ABCO – Abies concolor, ABMA – Abies magnifica, CADE – Calocedrus decurrens, CONU – Cornus nuttallii, PILA – Pinus lambertiana, PSME – Pseudotsuga menziesii, QUKE – Quercus kelloggii, UNKN – Unknown. Fig. S4. New deadwood ≥10 cm diameter from 2016 in the Yosemite Forest Dynamics Plot. ABCO – Abies concolor, ABMA – Abies magnifica, CADE – Calocedrus decurrens, CONU – Cornus nuttallii, PILA – Pinus lambertiana, PSME – Pseudotsuga menziesii, QUKE – Quercus kelloggii, UNKN – Unknown. Fig. S5. New deadwood ≥10 cm diameter from 2017 in the Yosemite Forest Dynamics Plot. ABCO – Abies concolor, ABMA – Abies magnifica, CADE – Calocedrus decurrens, CONU – Cornus nuttallii, PILA – Pinus lambertiana, PSME – Pseudotsuga menziesii, QUKE – Quercus kelloggii, UNKN – Unknown. Fig. S6. New deadwood ≥10 cm diameter from 2018 in the Yosemite Forest Dynamics Plot. ABCO – Abies concolor, ABMA – Abies magnifica, CADE – Calocedrus decurrens, CONU – Cornus nuttallii, PILA – Pinus lambertiana, PSME – Pseudotsuga menziesii, QUKE – Quercus kelloggii, UNKN – Unknown. Fig. S7. New deadwood ≥10 cm diameter from 2019 in the Yosemite Forest Dynamics Plot. ABCO – Abies concolor, ABMA – Abies magnifica, CADE – Calocedrus decurrens, CONU – Cornus nuttallii, PILA – Pinus lambertiana, PSME – Pseudotsuga menziesii, QUKE – Quercus kelloggii, UNKN – Unknown. Fig. S8. Cumulative deadwood ≥10 cm diameter in the Yosemite Forest Dynamics Plot in 2019, six years following fire. ABCO – Abies concolor, ABMA – Abies magnifica, CADE – Calocedrus decurrens, CONU – Cornus nuttallii, PILA – Pinus lambertiana, PSME – Pseudotsuga menziesii, QUKE – Quercus kelloggii, UNKN – Unknown. Fig. S9. Spatial variation of surface fuel biomass (≥10 cm diameter) in the Yosemite Forest Dynamics Plot at 20 m × 20 m grain. Locally high levels of biomass persisted through the 2013 Rim Fire (A), contributing 43% of total surface fuels ≥10 cm diameter present in 2019 (B).

Funding

Utah Agricultural Experiment Station National Park Service Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute Joint Fire Sciences Program

History