185 research outputs found
Land use change towards forests and wooded land correlates with large and frequent wildfires in Italy
Appraising fuel and fire behaviour for prescribed burning application in heathlands of Northwest Italy.
Wildfires and beech forests of Southern Alps during the summer 2003 climate anomaly: fire effects and post-fire management
Rural development funding and wildfire prevention: Evidences of spatial mismatches with fire activity
Limits to reproduction and seed size-number trade-offs that shape forest dominance and future recovery
Temporal trends in the protective capacity of burnt beech forests (Fagus sylvatica L.) against rockfall
Beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) forests covering relief-rich terrain often provide direct protection from rockfall for humans and their property. However, the efficacy in protecting against such hazards may abruptly and substantially change after disturbances such as fires, windthrows, avalanches and insect outbreaks. To date, there is little known about the mid-term evolution of the protective capacity in fire-injured beech stands. We selected 34 beech stands in the Southern European Alps that had burnt in different intensity fires over the last 40 years. We inventoried all living and dead trees in each stand and subsequently applied the rockfall model Rockfor.net to assess the protective capacity of fire-injured forests against falling rocks with volumes of 0.05, 0.2, and 1 m3. We tested forested slopes with mean gradients of 27°, 30°, and 35° and lengths of 75 and 150 m. Burnt beech forests hit by low-severity fires have nearly the same protective capacity as unburnt forests, because only thin fire-injured trees die while intermediate-sized and large-diameter trees mostly survive. However, the protective capacity of moderate- to high-severity burns is significantly reduced, especially between 10 and 30 years after the fire. In those cases, silvicultural or technical measures may be necessary. Besides the installation of rockfall nets or dams, small-scale felling of dying trees and the placement of stems at an oblique angle to the slope can mitigate the reduction in protection provided by the forest
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