Proceedings from the Joint Fire Science Conference and Workshop
"Crossing the Millennium: Integrating Spatial Technologies and Ecological Principles
for a New Age in Fire Management"
The Treatments Half Session – Contributed Papers
- A Proposed Long-Term National Study of the Consequences of Fire and Fire Surrogate Treatments
C. P. Weatherspoon
- Spatial Patterns of Fuel Treatments and Some Effects of Fire Growth and Behavior
M. A. Finney
- Effect of Thinning and Prescribed Burning on Wildfire Severity in Ponderosa Pine Forests
J. Pollet and P. N. Omi
- Reintroducing Fire in Eastside Ponderosa Pine Forests: A Long-Term Test of Fuel Treatments
Youngblood and G. Riegel
- Using Fuel Treatment and Site Characteristics to Model Stand Replacement Fire in Regeneration Stands Following the 1994 Wildfires on the Kootenai National Forest
W. L. Hall, R. H. Wakimoto and H. R. Zuuring
- Crown Fire Assessment in the Urban Intermix: Modeling the Spokane, Washington Ponderosa Pine Forests
D. A. Graves and L. F. Neuenschwander
- Effect of Climate Variability and Forecasting on Fuel Treatment Schedules in the Western U. S.
T. J. Brown and J. L. Betancourt
- FIRE TORCH: An European Project to Improve Prescribed Burning Knowledge and Use
H. Botelho, E. Rigolot, F. Rego, F. Guarnieri, F. Bingelli, J. Vega, P. Fernandes, R. Prodon, D. Molina, V. Gouma and V. Leone
- Fire/Decay: Managing Codependent Forest Processes Across the Landscape
E. Harvey, R. T. Graham, G. I. McDonald and M. J. Larsen
- Fuel: Logs, Sticks, Needles, Duff, and Much More
R. T. Graham, T. B. Jain, and A. E. Harvey
- Fire, Competition and Forest Pests: Landscape Treatment to Sustain Ecosystem Function
G. I. McDonald, A. E. Harvey, and J. R. Tonn
The Treatments Half Session – Abstracts Only
NONE