Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-jkksz Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-27T11:27:12.292Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Temporal and spatial climatic controls on Holocene fire-related erosion and sedimentation, Jemez Mountains, New Mexico

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Erin P. Fitch*
Affiliation:
Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM 87131, USA
Grant A. Meyer
Affiliation:
Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM 87131, USA
*
Corresponding author at: Department of Geology and Geophysics, University of Hawai'i at Mānoa, 1680 East-West Road, Honolulu, HI 96822, USA. E-mail address:epfitch@higp.hawaii.edu (E.P. Fitch), gmeyer@unm.edu (G.A. Meyer).

Abstract

In the Jemez Mountains, tree-ring data indicate that low-severity fires characterized the 400 yr before Euro-American settlement, and that subsequent fire suppression promoted denser forests, recent severe fires, and erosion. Over longer timescales, climate change may alter fire regimes; thus, we used fire-related alluvial deposits to assess the timing of moderate- to high-severity fires, their geomorphic impact, and relation to climate over the last 4000 yr. Fire-related sedimentation does not clearly follow millennial-scale climatic changes, but probability peaks commonly correspond with severe drought, e.g., within the interval 1700–1400 cal yr BP, and ca. 650 and ca. 410 cal yr BP. The latter episodes were preceded by prolonged wet intervals that could promote dense stands. Estimated recurrence intervals for fire-related sedimentation are 250–400 yr. Climatic differences with aspect influenced Holocene post-fire response: fire-related deposits constitute 77% of fan sediments from north-facing basins but only 39% of deposits from drier southerly aspects. With sparser vegetation and exposed bedrock, south aspects can generate runoff and sediment when unburned, whereas soil-mantled north aspects produce minor sediment unless severely burned. Recent channel incision appears unprecedented over the last 2300 yr, suggesting that fuel loading and extreme drought produced an anomalously severe burn in 2002.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
University of Washington

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Abatzoglou, J.T., Kolden, C.A., (2013). Relationships between climate and macroscale area burned in the western United States.. International Journal of Wildland Fire 22, 10031020.Google Scholar
Allen, C.D., (2001). Fire and vegetation history of the Jemez Mountains.. Johnson, P.S. Water, Watersheds, and Land Use In New Mexico: Impacts of Population Growth on Natural Resources, Santa Fe Region 2001. Socorro, NM. NM Bureau of Mines and Mineral Resources, 2933.Google Scholar
Allen, C.D., (2002). Lots of lightning and plenty of people: an ecological history of fire in the upland Southwest.. Chapter 5Vale, T.R. Fire, Native Peoples, and the Natural Landscape. Island Press, Covelo, CA.143193.Google Scholar
Allen, C.D., Breshears, D.D., (, 1998). Drought-induced shift of a forest/woodland ecotone: rapid landscape response to climate variation.. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 95, 1483914842.Google Scholar
Allen, C.D., Touchan, R., Swetnam, T.W., (, 1995). Landscape-scale fire history studies support fire management action at Bandelier.. Park Science 15, 3 1819.Google Scholar
Allen, C.D., Savage, M., Falk, D.A., Suckling, K.F., Swetnam, T.W., Schulke, T., Stacey, P.B., Morgan, P., Hoffman, M., Klingel, J.T., (, 2002). Ecological restoration of Southwestern Ponderosa pine ecosystems: a broad perspective.. Ecological Applications 12, 5 14181433.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Allen, C.D., Anderson, R.S., Jass, R.B., Toney, J.L., Baisan, C.H., (, 2008). Paired charcoal and tree-ring records of high-frequency Holocene fire from two New Mexico bog sites.. International Journal of Wildland Fire 17, 1 115130.Google Scholar
Anderson, R.S., Allen, C.D., Toney, J.L., Jass, R.B., Bair, A.N., (, 2008). Holocene vegetation and fire regimes in subalpine and mixed conifer forests, southern Rocky Mountains, USA.. International Journal of Wildland Fire 17, 96114.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Asmerom, Y., Polyak, V., Burns, S., Rasmussen, J., (, 2007). Solar forcing of Holocene climate: new insights from a speleothem record, southwestern United States.. Geology 35, 1 14.Google Scholar
Bigio, E., Swetnam, T.W., Baisan, C.H., (, 2010). A comparison and integration of tree-ring and alluvial records of fire history at the Missionary Ridge Fire, Durango, CO, USA.. The Holocene 20, 7 115.Google Scholar
Bowman, D.M., Balch, J., Artaxo, P., Bond, W.J., Cochrane, M.A., D'Antonio, C.M., DeFries, R., Johnston, F.H., Keeley, J.E., Krawchuk, M.A., Kull, C.A., Mack, M., Moritz, M.A., Pyne, S., Roos, C.I., Scott, C.I., Sodhi, A.C., Swetnam, N.S., T.W., , (, 2011). The human dimension of fire regimes on Earth.. Journal of Biogeography 38, 22232236.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Buck, B.J., and Monger, H.C. (1999). Stable isotopes and soil-geomorphology as indicators of Holocene climate change, northern Chihuahuan Desert.. Journal of Arid Environments 43, 357373.Google Scholar
Burnett, B.N., Meyer, G.A., and McFadden, L.D. (2008). Aspect-related microclimatic influences on slope forms and processes, northeastern Arizona.. Journal of Geophysical Research 113, F03002 http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2007JF000789.Google Scholar
Cannon, S.H. (2001). Debris-flow generation from recently burned watersheds.. Environmental and Engineering Geoscience 7, 321341.Google Scholar
Cannon, S.H., Bigio, E.R., Mine, E., (, 2001). A process for fire-related debris flow initiation, Cerro Grande fire, New Mexico.. Hydrological Processes 15, 30113023.Google Scholar
Carrara, P.E., (1989). Late Quaternary glacial and vegetative history of the Glacier National Park region, Montana.. U.S. Geological Survey Bulletin 1902, 164.Google Scholar
Castiglia, P.J., Fawcett, P.J., (2006). Large Holocene lakes and climate change in the Chihuahuan Desert.. Geology 34, 113116.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Conroy, J.L., Overpeck, J.T., Cole, J.E., Shanahan, T.M., Steinitz-Kannan, M., (, 2008). Holocene changes in eastern tropical Pacific climate inferred from a Gal"pagos lake sediment record.. Quaternary Science Reviews 27, 11661180.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cook, E.R., Woodhouse, C.A., Eakin, M., Meko, D.M., Stahle, D.W., (, 2004a). Long-term aridity changes in the western United States.. Science 306, 10151018.Google Scholar
Cook, E.R., Cleaveland, M.K., Eakin, C.M., Meko, D.M., Stahle, D.W., Woodhouse, C.A., (, 2004b). North American summer PDSI reconstructions.. IGBP PAGES/World Data Center for Paleoclimatology Data Contribution Series # 2004"045.Google Scholar
Cook, E.R., Seager, R., Cane, M.A., Stahle, D.W., (, 2007). North American drought: reconstructions, causes, and consequences.. Earth-Science Reviews 81, 93134.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Covington, W.W., Moore, M.M., (1994). Southwestern ponderosa forest structure: changes since Euro American settlement.. Journal of Forestry 92, 3947.Google Scholar
Davis, O.K., Shafer, D.S., (1992). A Holocene climatic record for the Sonoran Desert from pollen analysis of Montezuma Well, Arizona, USA.. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 92, 107119.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dickin, A.P., (2005). Radiogenic Isotope Geology.. 2nd ed. Cambridge University Press, .CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Doell, R.R., Dalrymple, G.B., Smith, R.L., Bailey, R.A., (, 1968). Paleo-magnetism, potassium-argon ages, and geology of rhyolite and associated rocks of the Valles caldera, New Mexico.. Memoirs of the Geological Society of America 116, 211248.Google Scholar
Fitch, E.F., (2013). Holocene fire-related alluvial chronology and geomorphic implications in the Jemez Mountains, New Mexico.. MS Thesis, Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM.Google Scholar
Frechette, J.D., Meyer, G.A., (2009). Holocene fire-related alluvial-fan deposition and climate in ponderosa pine and mixed conifer forests of the Sacramento Mountains, NM, USA.. The Holocene 19, 639651.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gavin, D.G., (2001). Estimation of inbuilt age in radiocarbon ages of soil charcoal for fire history studies.. Radiocarbon 43, 2744.Google Scholar
Grissino-Mayer, H.D., (1996). A 2129-year annual reconstruction of precipitation for north-western New Mexico, USA.. Dean, J.S., Meko, D.M., Swetnam, T.W. Tree Rings, Environment, and Humanity, Proceedings of the International Conference. Tucson, AZ, 17"21 May 1994.. 191204.Google Scholar
Grissino-Mayer, H.D., Swetnam, T.W., (2000). Century-scale climate forcing of fire regimes in the American Southwest.. The Holocene 10, 213220.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harden, T., Macklin, M.G., Baker, V.R., (, 2010). Holocene flood histories in southwestern USA.. Earth Surface Processes and Landforms 35, 707716.Google Scholar
Izett, G.A., Obradovich, J.D., Naeser, C.W., Cebula, G.T., (, 1981). Potassium-argon and fission-track zircon ages of Cerro Toledo rhyolite tephra in the Jemez Mountains, New Mexico.. U. S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 1199-D, 3743.Google Scholar
Jenkins, S.E., Sieg, C.H., Anderson, D.E., Kaufman, D.S., Pearthree, P.A., (, 2011). Late Holocene geomorphic record of fire in ponderosa pine and mixed-conifer forests, Kendrick Mountain, northern Arizona, USA.. International Journal of Wildland Fire 20, 125141.Google Scholar
Jimenez-Moreno, G., Fawcett, P.J., Anderson, R.S., (2008). Millennial- and centennial-scale vegetation and climate changes during the late Pleistocene and Holocene from northern New Mexico (USA).. Quaternary Science Reviews 27, 14421452.Google Scholar
Kelley, S., Osburn, G.R., Ferguson, C., Kempter, K., Osburn, M., (, 2004). Preliminary Geologic Map of the Seven Springs 7.5-minute Quadrangle.. New Mexico Bureau of Geology, (http://geoinfo.nmt.edu).Google Scholar
Kulisheck, J., (2005). The Archaeology of Pueblo Population Change on the Jemez Plateau, A.D. 1200 to 1700: The Effects of Spanish Contact and Conquest.. PhD Dissertation Department of Anthropology, Southern Methodist University, Dallas, TX.Google Scholar
Kulisheck, J., (2010). Like butterflies on a mounting board: Pueblo mobility and demography before 1825, Ch. 4.. Across a Great Divide: Continuity and Change in Native North American Societies, 1400"1900Amerind Studies in Archaeology. vol. 4, University of Arizona Press, Tucson.174191.Google Scholar
Larsen, I.J., MacDonald, L.H., Brown, E., Rough, D., Welsh, M.J., Pietraszek, J.H., Schaffrath, K., (, 2009). Causes of post-fire runoff and erosion: water repellency, cover, or soil sealing?.. Soil Science Society of America Journal 73, 4 13931407.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lavee, H., Kutiel, P., Segev, M., Benyamini, Y., (, 1995). Effect of surface roughness on runoff and erosion in a Mediterranean ecosystem: the role of fire.. Geomorphology 11, 227234.Google Scholar
Littell, J.S., McKenzie, D., Peterson, D.L., Westerling, A.L., (, 2009). Climate and wildfire area burned in Western US ecoprovinces, 1916"2003.. Ecological Applications 19, 10031021.Google Scholar
Luckman, B.H., (2000). The Little Ice Age in the Canadian rockies.. Geomorphology 32, 357394.Google Scholar
Mann, M.E., Zhang, Z., Hughes, M.K., Bradley, R.S., Miller, S.K., Rutherford, S., Ni, F., (, 2008). Proxy-based reconstructions of hemispheric and global surface temperature variations over the past two millennia.. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 105, 36 1325213257.Google Scholar
Margolis, E.Q., Balmat, J., (2009). Fire history and fire"climate relationships along a fire regime gradient in the Santa Fe Municipal Watershed, NM, USA.. Forest Ecology and Management 258, 24162430.Google Scholar
Margolis, E.Q., Swetnam, T.W., (2013). Historical fire"climate relationships of upper elevation fire regimes in the south-western United States.. International Journal of Wildland Fire 22, 588598.Google Scholar
Margolis, E.Q., Swetnam, T.W., Allen, C.D., (, 2007). A stand-replacing fire history in upper montane forests of the southern Rocky Mountains.. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 37, 22272241.Google Scholar
Margolis, E.Q., Swetnam, T.W., Allen, C.D., (, 2011). Historical stand-replacing fire in upper montane forests of the Madrean Sky Islands and Mogollon Plateau, southwestern USA.. Fire Ecology 7, 88107.Google Scholar
Marlon, J.R., Bartlein, P.J., Gavin, D.G., Long, C.J., Anderson, R.S., Briles, C.E., Walsh, M.K., (, 2012). Long-term perspective on wildfires in the western USA.. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 109, 9 E535E543.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Melis, T.S., Webb, R.H., Griffiths, P.G., Wise, T.J., (, 1994). Magnitude and frequency data for historic debris flows in Grand Canyon National Park and vicinity, Arizona.. U.S. Geological Survey Water Resources Investigations Report 94-4214(285 pp.).Google Scholar
Meyer, G.A., Pierce, J.L., (2003). Climatic controls on fire-induced sediment pulses in Yellowstone National Park and Central Idaho: a long-term perspective.. Forest Ecology and Management 178, 89104.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Meyer, G.A., Wells, S.G., (1997). Fire-related sedimentation events on alluvial fans, Yellowstone National Park, U.S.A.. Journal of Sedimentary Research 67, 776791.Google Scholar
Meyer, G.A., Wells, S.G., Balling, R.C. Jr., Jull, A.J.T., (, 1992). Response of alluvial systems to fire and climate change in Yellowstone National Park.. Nature 357, 147150.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Meyer, G.A., Wells, S.G., Jull, A.J.T., (, 1995). Fire and alluvial chronology in Yellowstone National Park: climatic and intrinsic controls on Holocene geomorphic processes.. Geological Society of America Bulletin 107, 12111230.Google Scholar
Morgan, P., Heyerdahl, E.K., Gibson, C.E., (, 2008). Multi-season climate synchronized forest fires throughout the 20th century, northern Rockies, USA.. Ecology 89, 717728.Google Scholar
Moy, C.M., Seltzer, G.O., Rodbell, D.T., Anderson, D.M., (, 2002). Variability of El Ni"o Southern Oscillation activity at millennial timescales during the Holocene epoch.. Nature 420, 6912 162165.Google Scholar
New, J., (2007). Holocene charcoal-based alluvial fire chronology and geomorphic implications in Caballero Canyon, Sacramento Mountains, New Mexico.. MS Thesis, Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, University of New Mexico, .Google Scholar
Orem, C.A., Pelletier, J.D., (, 2015). Quantifying the time scale of elevated geomorphic response following wildfires using multi-temporal LiDAR data: an example from the Las Conchas fire, Jemez Mountains, New Mexico.. Geomorphology 232, 224238.Google Scholar
Parsons, A., Robichaud, P.R., Lewis, S.A., Napper, C., Clark, J.T., (, 2010). Field guide for mapping post-fire soil burn severity.. USDA-Forest Service Rocky Mountain Research Station General Technical Report RMRS-GTR-243(49 pp.).Google Scholar
Pelletier, J.D., Orem, C.A., (2014). How do sediment yields from post-wildfire debris-laden flows depend on terrain slope, soil burn severity class, and drainage basin area? Insights from airborne-LiDAR change detection.. Earth Surface Processes and Landforms 39, 18221832.Google Scholar
Persico, L.P., Meyer, G.A., (2013). Natural and historical variability in fluvial processes, beaver activity, and climate in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem.. Earth Surface Processes and Landforms 38, 728750.Google Scholar
Pierce, J., Meyer, G., (2008). Long-term fire history from alluvial fan sediments: the role of drought and climate variability, and implications for management of Rocky Mountain forests.. International Journal of Wildland Fire 17, 8495.Google Scholar
Pierce, J.L., Meyer, G.A., Jull, A.J.T., (, 2004). Fire-induced erosion and millennial-scale climate change in northern ponderosa pine forests.. Nature 432, 8790.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Pierson, T.C., Costa, J.E., (1987). A rheologic classification of subaerial sediment-water flows.. Reviews in Engineering Geology 7, 112.Google Scholar
Poulos, M.J., Pierce, J.L., Flores, A.N., Benner, S.G., (, 2012). Hillslope asymmetry maps reveal widespread, multi?scale organization.. Geophysical Research Letters 39, 6L06406.Google Scholar
Rasmussen, J.B.T., Polyak, V.J., Asmerom, Y., (, 2006). Evidence for Pacific modulated precipitation variability during the late Holocene from the southwestern USA.. Geophysical Research Letters 33, .Google Scholar
Reimer, P.J., Baillie, M.G.L., Bard, E., Bayliss, A., Beck, J.W., Bertrand, C.J.H., Blackwell, P.G., Buck, C.E., Burr, G.S., Cutler, K.B., Damon, P.E., Edwards, R.L., Fairbanks, R.G., Friedrich, M., Guilderson, T.P., Hogg, A.G., Hughen, K.A., Kromer, B., McCormac, G., Manning, S., Ramsey, C.B., Reimer, R.W., Remmele, S., Southon, J.R., Stuiver, M., Talamo, S., Taylor, F.W., van der Plicht, J., Weyhenmeyer, C.E., (, 2004). INTCAL04 terrestrial radiocarbon age calibration, 0"26 calkyr BP.. Radiocarbon 46, 10291058.Google Scholar
Rein, B., Luckge, A., Reinhardt, L., Sirocko, F., Wolf, A., Dullo, W.C., (, 2005). El Ni"o variability off Peru during the last 20,000 yr.. Paleoceanography 20, 4(2004PA001099).Google Scholar
Reyes, A.V., Wiles, G.C., Smith, D.J., Barclay, D.J., Allen, S., Jackson, S., Larocque, S., Laxton, S., Lewis, D., Calkin, P.E., Clague, J.J., (, 2006). Expansion of alpine glaciers in Pacific North America in the first millennium AD.. Geology 34, 5760.Google Scholar
Riley, K., Pierce, J., Meyer, G.A., (, 2015). Vegetative and climatic controls on Holocene wildfire and erosion recorded in alluvial fans of the Middle Fork Salmon River, Idaho.. The Holocene 25, 857871.Google Scholar
Roos, C.I., Swetnam, T.W., (2011). A 1416-year reconstruction of annual, multidecadal, and centennial variability in area burned for ponderosa pine forests of the southern Colorado Plateau region, Southwest USA.. The Holocene 22, 281290.Google Scholar
Roos, C.I., Sullivan, A.P. III, McNamee, C., (, 2010). Paleoecological evidence for indigenous burning in the upland Southwest.. Dean, R.M. The Archaeology of Anthropogenic Environments.. Center for Archaeological Investigations, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale.142171.Google Scholar
Routson, C.C., Woodhouse, C.A., Overpeck, J.T., (, 2011). Second century megadrought in the Rio Grande headwaters, Colorado: how unusual was medieval drought?.. Geophysical Research Letters 38, .Google Scholar
Rubio, J.L., Forteza, J., Andreu, V., Cemi, R., (, 1997). Soil profile characteristics influencing runoff and soil erosion after forest fire: a case study (Valencia, Spain).. Soil Technology 11, 6778.Google Scholar
Savage, M., Mast, J.N., (2005). How resilient are southwestern ponderosa pine forests after crown fires?.. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 35, 967977.Google Scholar
Shakesby, R.A., Doerr, S.H., (2006). Wildfire as a hydrological and geomorphological agent.. Earth-Science Reviews 74, 269307.Google Scholar
Stahle, D.W., Cook, E.R., Cleaveland, M.K., Therrell, M.D., Meko, D.M., Grissino-Mayer, H.D., Watson, E., Luckman, B.H., (, 2000). Tree-ring data document 16th century megadrought over North America.. Eos 81, 12 121132.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stahle, D.W., Cleaveland, M.K., Grissino-Mayer, H.D., Griffin, R.D., Fye, F.K., Therrell, M.D., Burnette, D.J., Meko, D.M., Villanueva Diaz, J., (, 2009). Cool-and warm-season precipitation reconstructions over western New Mexico.. Journal of Climate 22, 13 37293750.Google Scholar
Stine, S., (1998). Medieval climatic anomaly in the Americas.. Issar, A.S., Brown, N. Water, Environment and Society in Times of Climatic Change.. Springer Netherlands, 4367.Google Scholar
Stuiver, M., Polach, H.A., (1977). Discussion: reporting of 14C data.. Radiocarbon 19, 355363.Google Scholar
Stuiver, M., Reimer, P.J., (1993). Extended 14C database and revised CALIB 3.0 14C age calibration program.. Radiocarbon 35, 215230.Google Scholar
Swetnam, T.W., (1990). Fire history and climate in the southwestern United States.. Proceedings of Symposium on Effects on Fire in Management of Southwestern Natural Resources. General Technical Report RM-191US Forest Service, 617.Google Scholar
Swetnam, T.W., Baisan, C.H., (1996). Historical fire regime patterns in the southwestern United States since AD 1700.. Allen, C.D. Fire Effects in Southwestern Forests: Proceedings of the Second La Mesa Fire Symposium.. USDA Forest Service General Technical Report RM-GTR-286, Los Alamos, NM 1132.Google Scholar
Swetnam, T.W., Baisan, C.H., (2003). Tree-ring reconstructions of fire and climate history of the Sierra Nevada and Southwestern United States.. Veblen, T.T., Baker, W.L., Montenegro, G., Swetnam, T.W. Fire and Climate Change in Temperate Ecosystems of the Western Americas.. Ecological Studies 160, Springer-Verlag, New York.158195.Google Scholar
Swetnam, T.W., Betancourt, J.L., (, 1998). Mesoscale disturbance and ecological response to decadal climatic variability in the American Southwest.. Journal of Climate 11, 31283147.Google Scholar
Swetnam, T.W., Allen, C.D., Betancourt, J.L., (, 1999). Applied historical ecology: using the past to manage for the future.. Ecological Applications 9, 11891206.Google Scholar
Telford, R.J., Heegaard, E., Birks, H.J.B., (, 2004). The intercept is a poor estimate of a calibrated radiocarbon age.. The Holocene 14, 296298.Google Scholar
Touchan, R., Allen, C.D., Swetnam, T.W., (, 1996). Fire history and climatic patterns in ponderosa pine and mixed-conifer forests of the Jemez Mountains, Northern New Mexico.. Allen, C.D. Fire Effects in Southwestern Forests: Proceedings of the Second La Mesa Fire Symposium.. USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. RM-GTR-286. Fort Collins, CO 3346.Google Scholar
Touchan, R., Woodhouse, C.A., Meko, D.M., Allen, C., (, 2011). Millennial precipitation reconstruction for the Jemez Mountains, New Mexico, reveals changing drought signal.. International Journal of Climatology 31, 896906.Google Scholar
Westerling, A.L., Hidalgo, H.G., Cayan, D.R., Swetnam, T.W., (, 2006). Warming and earlier spring increases western U.S. forest wildfire activity.. Science 313, 940943.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wilcox, B.P., Newman, B.D., Brandes, D., Davenport, D.W., Reid, K., (, 1997). Runoff from a semiarid ponderosa pine hillslope in New Mexico.. Water Resources Research 33, 23012314.Google Scholar
Wilcox, B.P., Breshears, D.D., Allen, C.D., (, 2003). Ecohydrology of a resource-conserving semiarid woodland: effects of scale and disturbance.. Ecological Monographs 73, 223239.Google Scholar
Williams, A.P., Allen, C.D., Macalady, A.K., Griffin, D., Woodhouse, C.A., Meko, D.M., McDowell, N.G., (, 2013). Temperature as a potent driver of regional forest drought stress and tree mortality.. Nature Climate Change 3, 3 292297.Google Scholar
Williams, A.P., Seager, R., Berkelhammer, M., Macalady, A.K., Crimmins, M.A., Swetnam, T.W., Trugman, A.T., Buenning, N., Hryniw, N., McDowell, N.G., Noone, D., Mora, C.I., Rahn, T., (, 2014). Correlations between components of the water balance and burned area reveal new insights for predicting fire activity in the southwest US.. International Journal of Wildland Fire 24, 1426.Google Scholar
Supplementary material: File

Fitch and Meyer supplementary material

Table S1

Download Fitch and Meyer supplementary material(File)
File 43.8 KB