*Lab Member
If you do not have access to the pdf of a paper, email me and I will send you a copy.
If you do not have access to the pdf of a paper, email me and I will send you a copy.
2023
90. Francis*, EJ, P Pourmohammadi, ZL Steel, BM Collins, MD Hurteau. In press. Proportion of forest area burned at high-severity increases with increasing forest cover and connectivity in western US watersheds. Landscape Ecology.
89. Jung*, CJ, AR Keyser, CC Remy, D Krofcheck, CD Allen, MD Hurteau. 2023. Topographic information improves simulated patterns of post-fire conifer regeneration in the southwest United States. Global Change Biology, 29:4342-4353.
88. Marsh*, C, JC Blankinship, MD Hurteau. 2023. Effects of nurse shrubs and biochar on planted conifer seedling survival and growth in a high-severity burn patch in New Mexico, USA. Forest Ecology and Management, 357:120971.
87. Davis, KT, et al. 2023. Reduced fire severity offers near-term buffer to climate-driven declines in conifer resilience across the western United States. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 120:e2208120120.
86. Liang, S, MD Hurteau. 2023. Novel climate-fire-vegetation interactions and their influence on forest ecosystems in the western USA. Functional Ecology, 37:2126-2142.
85. May*, CJ, HSJ Zald, MP North, AN Gray, MD Hurteau. 2023. Repeated burns fail to restore pine regeneration to the natural range of variability in Sierra Nevada mixed-conifer forest, USA. Restoration Ecology, 31:e13863.
84. Dickman, LT, et al. 2023. Integrating plant physiology into simulation of fire behavior and effects. New Phytologist, 238:952-970.
83. Goodwin*, MJ, LP Kerhoulas, HSJ Zald, MP North, MD Hurteau. 2023. Conifer water-use patterns across temporal and topographic gradients in the southern Sierra Nevada. Tree Physiology, 43:210-220.
2022
82. Marsh*, C, JL Crockett*, D Krofcheck, A Keyser, CD Allen, M Litvak, MD Hurteau. 2022. Planted seedling survival in a post-wildfire landscape: from experimental planting to predictive probabilistic surfaces. Forest Ecology and Management, 525:120524.
81. Sam, JA, WJ Baldwin, AL Westerling, H Preisler, Q Xu, MD Hurteau, BM Sleeter, SB Thapa. 2022. Simulating burn severity maps at 30 meters in two forested regions in California. Environmental Research Letters, 17:105004.
80. Jones, GM, EK Vraga, PF Hessburg, MD Hurteau, CD Allen, RE Keane, TA Spies, MP North, BM Collins, MA Finney, JM Lydersen, AL Westerling. 2022. Counteracting wildfire misinformation. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, 20:392-393.
79. Shuman, JK, et al. 2022. Reimagine fire science for the Anthropocene. PNAS Nexus.
78. Xu, Q, AL Westerling, A Notohamiprodjo, C Wiedinmyer, JJ Picotte, SA Parks, MD Hurteau, ME Marlier, CA Kolden, JA Sam, WJ Baldwin, C Ade. 2022. Wildfire burn severity and emissions inventory: an example implementation over California. Environmental Research Letters 17:085008.
77. Margolis, EQ, et al. 2022. The North American tree-ring fire-scar network. Ecosphere 13:e4159.
76. Juang, CS, AP Williams, JT Abatzoglou, JK Balch, MD Hurteau, MA Moritz. 2022. Rapid growth of large forest fires drives the exponential response of annual forest-fire area to aridity in the western United States. Geophysical Research Letters, 49:e2021GL097131.
75. Zald, HSJ, CC Callahan, MD Hurteau, MJ Goodwin*, MP North. 2022. Tree growth responses to extreme drought after mechanical thinning and prescribed fire in a Sierra Nevada mixed-conifer forest, USA. Forest Ecology and Management, 510:120107.
74. Crockett*, JL, MD Hurteau. 2022. Post-fire early successional vegetation buffers surface microclimate and increases survival of planted conifer seedlings in the Southwestern United States. Canadian Journal of Forest Research, 52:416-425.
73. Marsh*, C, D Krofcheck, MD Hurteau. 2022. Identifying microclimate tree seedling refugia in post-wildfire landscapes. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology, 313:108741.
2021
72. Goodwin*, MJ, HSJ Zald, MP North, MD Hurteau. 2021. Climate-driven tree mortality and fuel aridity increase wildfire's potential heat flux. Geophysical Research Letters, 48 e2021GL094954.
71. Stevens JT, CM Haffey, JD Coop, PJ Fornwalt, L Yocom, CD Allen, A Bradley, OT Burney, D Carril, ME Chambers, TB Chapman, SL Haire, MD Hurteau, JM Iniguez, EQ Margolis, C Marks, LAE Marshall, KC Rodman, CS Stevens-Rumann, AE Thode, JJ Walker. 2021. Tamm Review: Postfire landscape management in frequent-fire conifer forests of the southwestern United States. Forest Ecology and Management 502: 119678.
70. Remy*, CC, AR Keyser*, DJ Krofcheck, ME Litvak, MD Hurteau. 2021. Future fire-driven landscape changes along a southwestern US elevation gradient. Climatic Change 166:46.
69. Odland, MC, MJ Goodwin*, BV Smithers, MD Hurteau, MP North. 2021. Plant community response to thinning and repeated fire in Sierra Nevada mixed-conifer undestories. Forest Ecology and Management 495: 119361.
68. Prichard, SJ, PF Hessburg, RK Hagmann, NA Povak, SZ Dobrowski, MD Hurteau, VR Kane, RE Keane, LN Kobziar, CA Kolden, M North, SA Parks, HD Safford, JT Stevens, LL Yocom, KJ Churchill, RW Gray, DW Huffman, FK Lake, P Khatri-Chhetri. In press. Adapting western North American forests to climate change and wildfires: ten common questions. Ecological Applications, 31:e02433.
67. North, MP, RA York, BM Collins, MD Hurteau, GM Jones, EE Knapp, L Kobziar, H McCann, MD Meyer, SL Stephens, RE Tompkins, CL Tubbesing. 2021. Pyrosilviculture needed for landscape resilience of dry western U.S. forests. Journal of Forestry, 119:520-544.
66. McDowell, NG, Z Tan, MD Hurteau, R Prasad. 2021. Trade-offs of forest management scenarios on forest carbon exchange and threatened and endangered species habitat. Ecosphere, 12:e03779.
65. Jaffe, MR, BM Collins, J Levine, H Northrop, F Malandra, D Krofcheck, MD Hurteau, SL Stephens, M North. 2021. Prescribed fire shrub consumption in a Sierra Nevada mixed-conifer forest. Canadian Journal of Forest Research, 51:1718-1725.
64. Stephens, SL, AL Westerling, MD Hurteau, MZ Peery, CA Schultz, S Thompson. 2021. Undesirable outcomes in seasonally dry forests. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, 19:87-88.
63. Hurteau, M.D. 2021. (Invited) The role of forests in the global carbon cycle and in climate change. In Climate Change 3rd Ed: Observed impacts on planet earth. Ed. T.M. Letcher. Elsevier B.V., Amsterdam, Netherlands.
62. Fargione, J, DL Haase, OT Burney, OA Kildisheva, G Edge, SC Cook-Patton, T Chapman, A Rempel, MD Hurteau, KT Davis, S Dobrowski, S Enebak, R De La Torre, AAR Bhuta, F Cubbage, B Kittler, D Zhang, RW Guldin. 2021. Challenges to the reforestation pipeline in the United States. Frontiers in Forests and Global Change, 4:629198.
61. Steel, ZL, MJ Goodwin*, MD Meyer, GA Fricker, HSJ Zald, MD Hurteau, MP North. 2021. Do forest fuel reduction treatments confer resistance to beetle infestation and drought mortality? Ecosphere, 12:e03344.
2020
60. Goodwin*, MJ, MP North, HSJ Zald, MD Hurteau. 2020. Changing climate reallocates the carbon debt of frequent-fire forests. Global Change Biology, 26:6180-6189.
59. Coop, JD, SA Parks, CS Stevens-Rumann, SD Crausbay, PE Higuera, MD Hurteau, A Tepley, E Whitman, T Assal, BM Collins, KT Davis, S Dobrowski, DA Falk, PJ Fornwalt, PZ Fule, BJ Harvey, VR Kane, CE Littlefield, EQ Margolis, M North, MA Parisien, S Prichard, KC Rodman. 2020. Wildfire-driven forest conversion in western North American Landscapes. BioScience, 70:659-673.
58. Stephens, SL, AL Westerling, MD Hurteau, MZ Peery, CA Schultz, S Thompson. 2020. Fire and climate change: conserving seasonally dry forests is still possible. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, 18:354-360.
57. Keyser*, AR, DJ Krofcheck*, CC Remy*, CD Allen, MD Hurteau. 2020. Simulated increases in fire activity reinforce shrub conversion in a southwestern US forest. Ecosystems, 23:1702-1713.
2019
56. Krofcheck*, DJ, CC Remy*, AR Keyser*, MD Hurteau. 2019. Optimizing forest management stabilizes carbon under projected climate and wildfire. Journal of Geophysical Research - Biogeosciences 124:3075-3087.
55. Krofcheck*, DJ, ME Litvak, MD Hurteau. 2019. Allometric relationships for Quercus gambelii and Robinia neomexicana for biomass estimation following disturbance. Ecosphere 10:e02905.
54. Cassell, B., R.M. Scheller, M. Lucash, M.D. Hurteau, E.L. Loudermilk. 2019. Widespread severe wildfires under climate change lead to increased forest homogeneity in dry mixed conifer forests. Ecosphere 10:e02934.
53. Hessburg, PF, CL Miller, SA Parks, NA Povak, AH Taylor, PE Higuera, SJ Prichard, MP North, BM Collins, MD Hurteau, AJ Larson, CD Allen, SL Stephens, H Rivera-Huerta, CS Stevens-Rumann, LD Daniels, Z Gedalof, RW Gray, VR Kane, DJ Churchill, RK Hagmann, TA Spies, CA Cansler, RT Belote, TT Veblen, MA Battaglia, C Hoffman, CN Skinner, HD Safford, RB Salter. 2019. Climate, Environment, and Disturbance govern resilience of western North American forests. Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution 7:239.
52. Remy*, CC, DJ Krofcheck*, AR Keyser*, ME Litvak, SL Collins, MD Hurteau. 2019. Integrating species-specific information in models improves regional projections under climate change. Geophysical Research Letters 46:6554-6562.
51. Hurteau, MD, MP North, GW Koch, BA Hungate. 2019. Managing for disturbance stabilizes forest carbon. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 116:10193-10195.
50. Krofcheck, DJ*, EL Loudermilk, JK Hiers, RM Scheller, MD Hurteau. 2019. The effects of management on long-term carbon stability in a southeastern US forest matrix under extreme fire weather. Ecosphere 10(3):e02631
49. Hurteau, MD, S Liang*, AL Westerling, C Wiedinmyer. 2019. Vegetation-fire feedback reduces projected area burned under climate change. Scientific Reports 9:2838.
2018
48. Fargione, JE, S Bassett, T Boucher, SD Bridgham, RT Conant, SC Cook-Patton, PW Ellis, A Falucci, J Fourquerean, T Gopalakrishna, H Gu, B Henderson, MD Hurteau, KD Kroeger, T Kroeger, TJ Lark, SM Leavitt, G Lomax, RI McDonald, PJ Megonigal, DA Miteva, CJ Richardson, J Sanderman, D Shoch, SA Spawn, JW Veldman, CA Williams, PB Woodbury, C Zganjar, M Baranski, P Elias, RA Houghton, E Landis, E McGlynn, WH Schlesinger, JV Siikamaki, AE Sutton-Grier, BW Griscom. 2018. Natural climate solutions for the United States. Science Advances 4:eaat1869.
47. Goodwin, M.J.*, M.P. North, H.S.J. Zald, M.D. Hurteau. 2018. The 15-year post-treatment response of a mixed-conifer understory plant community to thinning and burning treatments. Forest Ecology and Management 229:617-624.
46. Liang, S.*, M.D. Hurteau, A.L. Westerling. 2018. Large-scale restoration increases carbon stability under projected climate and wildfire regimes. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 16:207-212.
45. Swanteson-Franz, R.J.*, D.J. Krocheck*, M.D. Hurteau. 2018. Quantifying forest carbon dynamics as a function of tree species composition and management under projected climate. Ecosphere 9(4):e02191.
44. Krofcheck, D.J.*, M.D. Hurteau, R.M. Scheller, E.L. Loudermilk. 2018. Prioritizing forest fuels treatments based on the probability of high-severity fire restores adaptive capacity in Sierran forests. Global Change Biology 24:729-737.
43. Scheller, R.M., A.M. Kretchun, E.L. Loudermilk, M.D. Hurteau, P.J. Weisberg, C. Skinner. 2018. Interactions among fuel management, species composition, bark beetles, and climate change and the potential effects on forests of the Lake Tahoe Basin. Ecosystems 21:643-656.
2017
42. Maestrini, B., E.C. Alvey, M.D. Hurteau, H. Safford, J.R. Miesel. 2017. Fire severity alters the distribution of pyrogenic carbon stocks across ecosystem pools in a Californian mixed-conifer forest. JGR-Biogeosciences 122:2338-2355.
41. Liang, S.*, M.D. Hurteau, A.L. Westerling. 2017. Potential decline in carbon carrying capacity under projected climate-wildfire interactions in the Sierra Nevada. Scientific Reports 7:2420.
40. Krofcheck D.J.*, M.D. Hurteau, R.M. Scheller, E.L. Loudermilk. 2017. Restoring surface fire stabilizes forest carbon under extreme fire weather in the Sierra Nevada. Ecosphere 8(1):e01663.
39. Hurteau M.D. 2017. Quantifying the carbon balance of forest restoration and wildfire under projected climate in the fire-prone southwestern US. PLoS ONE 12(1):e0169275.
38. Liang, S.*, M.D. Hurteau, A.L. Westerling. 2017. Response of Sierra Nevada forests to projected climate-wildfire interactions. Global Change Biology 23:2016-2030.
2016
37. Kretchun, A.M., E.L. Loudermilk, R.M. Scheller, M.D. Hurteau, S. Belmcheri. 2016. Climate and bark beetle effects on forest productivity: linking dendroecology with forest landscape modeling. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 46:1026-1034.
36. Laflower, D.M.*, M.D. Hurteau, G.W. Koch, M.P. North, B.A. Hungate. 2016. Climate-driven changes in forest succession and the influence of management on forest carbon dynamics in the Puget Lowlands of Washington State, USA. Forest Ecology and Management, 362:194-204.
35. Hurteau, M.D., S. Liang*, K.L. Martin*, M.P. North, G.W. Koch, B.A. Hungate. 2016. Restoring forest structure and process stabilizes forest carbon in wildfire-prone southwestern ponderosa pine forests. Ecological Applications, 26:382-391.
34. Buchholz, T., M.D. Hurteau, J. Gunn, D. Saah. 2016. A global meta-analysis of forest bioenergy greenhouse gas emission accounting studies. Global Change Biology Bioenergy, 8:281-289.
2015
33. Wiechmann, M.L.*, M.D. Hurteau, J.P. Kaye, J.R. Miesel. 2015. Macro-particle charcoal C content following prescribed burning in a mixed-conifer forest, Sierra Nevada, California. PLoS ONE 10(8):e0135014.
32. Wiechmann, M.L.*, M.D. Hurteau, M.P. North, G.W. Koch, L. Jerabkova. 2015. The carbon balance of reducing wildfire risk and restoring process: an analysis of 10-year post-treatment carbon dynamics in a mixed-conifer forest. Climatic Change, 132:709-719.
Only half of the table of C stock values is in the original article. The erratum with the full table is here.
31. Addington, R.N., S.J. Hudson, J.K. Hiers, M.D. Hurteau, T.F. Hutcherson, G. Matusick, J.M. Parker. 2015. Relationships among wildfire, prescribed fire, and drought in a fire-prone landscape in the southeastern United States. International Journal of Wildland Fire, 24:778-783.
30. Martin, K.L.*, M.D. Hurteau, B.A. Hungate, G.W. Koch, and M.P. North. 2015. Carbon tradeoffs of restoration and provision of endangered species habitat in a fire-maintained forest. Ecosystems, 18:76-88.
2014
29. Hurteau, M.D., A.L. Westerling, C. Wiedinmyer, and B.P. Bryant. 2014. Projected effects of climate and development on California wildfire emissions through 2100. Environmental Science and Technology, 48:2298-2304.
28. Earles, J.M., M.P. North, and M.D. Hurteau. 2014. Wildfire and drought dynamics destabilize carbon stores of fire-suppressed forests. Ecological Applications, 24:732-740.
27. Hurteau, M.D., T.A. Robards, D. Stevens*, D. Saah, M. North, and G.W. Koch. 2014. Modeling climate and fuel reduction impacts on mixed-conifer forest carbon stocks in the Sierra Nevada, California. Forest Ecology and Management, 315:30-42.
26. Dangal, S.R.S.*, B.S. Felzer, and M.D. Hurteau. 2014. Effects of agriculture and timber harvest in Eastern US forests. Journal of Geophysical Research - Biogeosciences, 119:35-54.
25. Hurteau, M.D., J.B. Bradford, P.Z. Fule, A.H. Taylor, and K.L. Martin*. 2014. Climate change, fire management and ecological services in the southwestern US. Forest Ecology and Management, 327:280-289.
2013
24. Kerhoulas, L.P., T.E. Kolb, M.D. Hurteau, and G.W. Koch. 2013. Managing for climate change adaptation in forests: a case study from the U.S. Southwest. Journal of Applied Ecology, 50:1311-1320.
23. Moritz, M.A., M.D. Hurteau, K.N. Suding, and C.M. D'Antonio. 2013. "Bounded ranges of variation" as a framework for future conservation and fire management. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, The Year in Ecology and Conservation Biology, 1286:92-107.
22. Hurteau, M.D., B.A. Hungate, G.W. Koch, M.P. North, and G.R. Smith. 2013. Aligning ecology and markets in the forest carbon cycle. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, 11:37-42.
21. Hurteau, M.D. 2013. Effects of wildland fire management on forest carbon stores. In Land use and the carbon cycle: science applications in human environment interactions. Eds, D.G. Brown, D.T. Robinson, N.H.F. French, and B.C. Reed. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge UK.
2011
20. Waddell, C.J.*, M.D. Hurteau, and D. Huntzinger. 2011. Product carbon footprinting: a proposed framework to increase confidence, reduce costs, and incorporate profit incentive. Carbon Management, 2:645-657.
19. North, M. and M. Hurteau. 2011. High-severity wildfire effects on carbon stocks and emissions in fuels treated and untreated forest. Forest Ecology and Management, 261:1115-1120.
18. Wu, T., Y-S. Kim, M.D. Hurteau. 2011. Cutting trees to save forests: using economic incentives to overcome barriers to forest restoration. Restoration Ecology, 19:441-445.
17. Hurteau, M.D. and M.L. Brooks. 2011. Short- and long-term effects of fire on carbon in US dry temperate forest systems. BioScience, 61:139-146.
16. Hurteau, M.D., M.T. Stoddard, and P.Z. Fule. 2011. The carbon costs of mitigating high-severity wildfire in southwestern ponderosa pine. Global Change Biology, 17:1516-1521.
2010
15. Hurteau, M.D. and C. Wiedinmyer. 2010. Response to comment on "Prescribed fire as a means of reducing forest carbon emissions in the Western United States". Environmental Science and Technology, 44:6521.
14. Wiedinmyer, C. and M.D. Hurteau. 2010. Prescribed fire as a means of reducing forest carbon emissions in the western US. Environmental Science and Technology, 44:1926-1932.
13. Hurteau, M.D. and M. North. 2010. Carbon recovery rates following different wildfire risk mitigation treatments. Forest Ecology and Management, 260:930-937.
2009
12. Hurteau, M. and M. North. 2009. Fuel treatment effects on tree-based carbon storage under modeled wildfire scenarios. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, 7:409-414.
11. Hurteau, M., M. North, and T. Foin. 2009. Modeling the influence of precipitation and nitrogen deposition on forest understory fuel connectivity in Sierra Nevada mixed-conifer forest. Ecological Modelling, 220:2460-2468.
10. Mignone, B.K., M.D. Hurteau, Y. Chen, and B. Sohngen. 2009. Carbon offsets, reversal risk and US climate policy. Carbon Balance and Management, 4:3.
9. Hurteau, M.D., B.A. Hungate, and G.W. Koch. 2009. Accounting for risk in valuing forest carbon offsets. Carbon Balance and Management, 4:1.
8. North, M., M. Hurteau, and J. Innes. 2009. Fire suppression and fuels treatment effects on mixed-conifer carbon stocks and emissions. Ecological Applications, 19:1385-1396.
7. Hurteau, M. and M. North. 2009. Response of Arnica dealbata to climate change, nitrogen deposition, and fire. Plant Ecology, 202:191-194.
2008
6. Hurteau, M.D., G.W. Koch, and B.A. Hungate. 2008. Carbon protection and fire risk reduction: toward a full accounting of forest carbon offsets. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, 6:493-498.
5. Hurteau, M. and M. North. 2008. Mixed-conifer understory response to climate change, nitrogen, and fire. Global Change Biology, 14:1543-1552.
2001-2007
4. Hurteau, M., H. Zald, M. North. 2007. Species-specific response to climate reconstruction in upper-elevation mixed-conifer forests of the western Sierra Nevada, California. Canadian Journal of Forest Research, 37:1681-1691.
3. North, M., M. Hurteau, R. Fiegener, and M. Barbour. 2005. Influence of fire and El Niño on tree recruitment varies by species in Sierran mixed conifer. Forest Science, 51:187-197.
2. Hurteau, M., M. Stoddard, and B. Oberhardt. 2001. Sampling method captures vegetation and wildlife data in sagebrush-grassland ecosystem (Arizona). Ecological Restoration, 19:267-268.
1. Alcoze, T. and M. Hurteau. 2001. Implementing the archeo-environmental reconstruction technique: rediscovering the historic ground layer of three plant communities in the greater Grand Canyon Region. In The Historical Ecology Handbook. Eds, Dave Egan and Evelyn Howell, Island Press, Covelo, CA.
90. Francis*, EJ, P Pourmohammadi, ZL Steel, BM Collins, MD Hurteau. In press. Proportion of forest area burned at high-severity increases with increasing forest cover and connectivity in western US watersheds. Landscape Ecology.
89. Jung*, CJ, AR Keyser, CC Remy, D Krofcheck, CD Allen, MD Hurteau. 2023. Topographic information improves simulated patterns of post-fire conifer regeneration in the southwest United States. Global Change Biology, 29:4342-4353.
88. Marsh*, C, JC Blankinship, MD Hurteau. 2023. Effects of nurse shrubs and biochar on planted conifer seedling survival and growth in a high-severity burn patch in New Mexico, USA. Forest Ecology and Management, 357:120971.
87. Davis, KT, et al. 2023. Reduced fire severity offers near-term buffer to climate-driven declines in conifer resilience across the western United States. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 120:e2208120120.
86. Liang, S, MD Hurteau. 2023. Novel climate-fire-vegetation interactions and their influence on forest ecosystems in the western USA. Functional Ecology, 37:2126-2142.
85. May*, CJ, HSJ Zald, MP North, AN Gray, MD Hurteau. 2023. Repeated burns fail to restore pine regeneration to the natural range of variability in Sierra Nevada mixed-conifer forest, USA. Restoration Ecology, 31:e13863.
84. Dickman, LT, et al. 2023. Integrating plant physiology into simulation of fire behavior and effects. New Phytologist, 238:952-970.
83. Goodwin*, MJ, LP Kerhoulas, HSJ Zald, MP North, MD Hurteau. 2023. Conifer water-use patterns across temporal and topographic gradients in the southern Sierra Nevada. Tree Physiology, 43:210-220.
2022
82. Marsh*, C, JL Crockett*, D Krofcheck, A Keyser, CD Allen, M Litvak, MD Hurteau. 2022. Planted seedling survival in a post-wildfire landscape: from experimental planting to predictive probabilistic surfaces. Forest Ecology and Management, 525:120524.
81. Sam, JA, WJ Baldwin, AL Westerling, H Preisler, Q Xu, MD Hurteau, BM Sleeter, SB Thapa. 2022. Simulating burn severity maps at 30 meters in two forested regions in California. Environmental Research Letters, 17:105004.
80. Jones, GM, EK Vraga, PF Hessburg, MD Hurteau, CD Allen, RE Keane, TA Spies, MP North, BM Collins, MA Finney, JM Lydersen, AL Westerling. 2022. Counteracting wildfire misinformation. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, 20:392-393.
79. Shuman, JK, et al. 2022. Reimagine fire science for the Anthropocene. PNAS Nexus.
78. Xu, Q, AL Westerling, A Notohamiprodjo, C Wiedinmyer, JJ Picotte, SA Parks, MD Hurteau, ME Marlier, CA Kolden, JA Sam, WJ Baldwin, C Ade. 2022. Wildfire burn severity and emissions inventory: an example implementation over California. Environmental Research Letters 17:085008.
77. Margolis, EQ, et al. 2022. The North American tree-ring fire-scar network. Ecosphere 13:e4159.
76. Juang, CS, AP Williams, JT Abatzoglou, JK Balch, MD Hurteau, MA Moritz. 2022. Rapid growth of large forest fires drives the exponential response of annual forest-fire area to aridity in the western United States. Geophysical Research Letters, 49:e2021GL097131.
75. Zald, HSJ, CC Callahan, MD Hurteau, MJ Goodwin*, MP North. 2022. Tree growth responses to extreme drought after mechanical thinning and prescribed fire in a Sierra Nevada mixed-conifer forest, USA. Forest Ecology and Management, 510:120107.
74. Crockett*, JL, MD Hurteau. 2022. Post-fire early successional vegetation buffers surface microclimate and increases survival of planted conifer seedlings in the Southwestern United States. Canadian Journal of Forest Research, 52:416-425.
73. Marsh*, C, D Krofcheck, MD Hurteau. 2022. Identifying microclimate tree seedling refugia in post-wildfire landscapes. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology, 313:108741.
2021
72. Goodwin*, MJ, HSJ Zald, MP North, MD Hurteau. 2021. Climate-driven tree mortality and fuel aridity increase wildfire's potential heat flux. Geophysical Research Letters, 48 e2021GL094954.
71. Stevens JT, CM Haffey, JD Coop, PJ Fornwalt, L Yocom, CD Allen, A Bradley, OT Burney, D Carril, ME Chambers, TB Chapman, SL Haire, MD Hurteau, JM Iniguez, EQ Margolis, C Marks, LAE Marshall, KC Rodman, CS Stevens-Rumann, AE Thode, JJ Walker. 2021. Tamm Review: Postfire landscape management in frequent-fire conifer forests of the southwestern United States. Forest Ecology and Management 502: 119678.
70. Remy*, CC, AR Keyser*, DJ Krofcheck, ME Litvak, MD Hurteau. 2021. Future fire-driven landscape changes along a southwestern US elevation gradient. Climatic Change 166:46.
69. Odland, MC, MJ Goodwin*, BV Smithers, MD Hurteau, MP North. 2021. Plant community response to thinning and repeated fire in Sierra Nevada mixed-conifer undestories. Forest Ecology and Management 495: 119361.
68. Prichard, SJ, PF Hessburg, RK Hagmann, NA Povak, SZ Dobrowski, MD Hurteau, VR Kane, RE Keane, LN Kobziar, CA Kolden, M North, SA Parks, HD Safford, JT Stevens, LL Yocom, KJ Churchill, RW Gray, DW Huffman, FK Lake, P Khatri-Chhetri. In press. Adapting western North American forests to climate change and wildfires: ten common questions. Ecological Applications, 31:e02433.
67. North, MP, RA York, BM Collins, MD Hurteau, GM Jones, EE Knapp, L Kobziar, H McCann, MD Meyer, SL Stephens, RE Tompkins, CL Tubbesing. 2021. Pyrosilviculture needed for landscape resilience of dry western U.S. forests. Journal of Forestry, 119:520-544.
66. McDowell, NG, Z Tan, MD Hurteau, R Prasad. 2021. Trade-offs of forest management scenarios on forest carbon exchange and threatened and endangered species habitat. Ecosphere, 12:e03779.
65. Jaffe, MR, BM Collins, J Levine, H Northrop, F Malandra, D Krofcheck, MD Hurteau, SL Stephens, M North. 2021. Prescribed fire shrub consumption in a Sierra Nevada mixed-conifer forest. Canadian Journal of Forest Research, 51:1718-1725.
64. Stephens, SL, AL Westerling, MD Hurteau, MZ Peery, CA Schultz, S Thompson. 2021. Undesirable outcomes in seasonally dry forests. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, 19:87-88.
63. Hurteau, M.D. 2021. (Invited) The role of forests in the global carbon cycle and in climate change. In Climate Change 3rd Ed: Observed impacts on planet earth. Ed. T.M. Letcher. Elsevier B.V., Amsterdam, Netherlands.
62. Fargione, J, DL Haase, OT Burney, OA Kildisheva, G Edge, SC Cook-Patton, T Chapman, A Rempel, MD Hurteau, KT Davis, S Dobrowski, S Enebak, R De La Torre, AAR Bhuta, F Cubbage, B Kittler, D Zhang, RW Guldin. 2021. Challenges to the reforestation pipeline in the United States. Frontiers in Forests and Global Change, 4:629198.
61. Steel, ZL, MJ Goodwin*, MD Meyer, GA Fricker, HSJ Zald, MD Hurteau, MP North. 2021. Do forest fuel reduction treatments confer resistance to beetle infestation and drought mortality? Ecosphere, 12:e03344.
2020
60. Goodwin*, MJ, MP North, HSJ Zald, MD Hurteau. 2020. Changing climate reallocates the carbon debt of frequent-fire forests. Global Change Biology, 26:6180-6189.
59. Coop, JD, SA Parks, CS Stevens-Rumann, SD Crausbay, PE Higuera, MD Hurteau, A Tepley, E Whitman, T Assal, BM Collins, KT Davis, S Dobrowski, DA Falk, PJ Fornwalt, PZ Fule, BJ Harvey, VR Kane, CE Littlefield, EQ Margolis, M North, MA Parisien, S Prichard, KC Rodman. 2020. Wildfire-driven forest conversion in western North American Landscapes. BioScience, 70:659-673.
58. Stephens, SL, AL Westerling, MD Hurteau, MZ Peery, CA Schultz, S Thompson. 2020. Fire and climate change: conserving seasonally dry forests is still possible. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, 18:354-360.
57. Keyser*, AR, DJ Krofcheck*, CC Remy*, CD Allen, MD Hurteau. 2020. Simulated increases in fire activity reinforce shrub conversion in a southwestern US forest. Ecosystems, 23:1702-1713.
2019
56. Krofcheck*, DJ, CC Remy*, AR Keyser*, MD Hurteau. 2019. Optimizing forest management stabilizes carbon under projected climate and wildfire. Journal of Geophysical Research - Biogeosciences 124:3075-3087.
55. Krofcheck*, DJ, ME Litvak, MD Hurteau. 2019. Allometric relationships for Quercus gambelii and Robinia neomexicana for biomass estimation following disturbance. Ecosphere 10:e02905.
54. Cassell, B., R.M. Scheller, M. Lucash, M.D. Hurteau, E.L. Loudermilk. 2019. Widespread severe wildfires under climate change lead to increased forest homogeneity in dry mixed conifer forests. Ecosphere 10:e02934.
53. Hessburg, PF, CL Miller, SA Parks, NA Povak, AH Taylor, PE Higuera, SJ Prichard, MP North, BM Collins, MD Hurteau, AJ Larson, CD Allen, SL Stephens, H Rivera-Huerta, CS Stevens-Rumann, LD Daniels, Z Gedalof, RW Gray, VR Kane, DJ Churchill, RK Hagmann, TA Spies, CA Cansler, RT Belote, TT Veblen, MA Battaglia, C Hoffman, CN Skinner, HD Safford, RB Salter. 2019. Climate, Environment, and Disturbance govern resilience of western North American forests. Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution 7:239.
52. Remy*, CC, DJ Krofcheck*, AR Keyser*, ME Litvak, SL Collins, MD Hurteau. 2019. Integrating species-specific information in models improves regional projections under climate change. Geophysical Research Letters 46:6554-6562.
51. Hurteau, MD, MP North, GW Koch, BA Hungate. 2019. Managing for disturbance stabilizes forest carbon. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 116:10193-10195.
50. Krofcheck, DJ*, EL Loudermilk, JK Hiers, RM Scheller, MD Hurteau. 2019. The effects of management on long-term carbon stability in a southeastern US forest matrix under extreme fire weather. Ecosphere 10(3):e02631
49. Hurteau, MD, S Liang*, AL Westerling, C Wiedinmyer. 2019. Vegetation-fire feedback reduces projected area burned under climate change. Scientific Reports 9:2838.
2018
48. Fargione, JE, S Bassett, T Boucher, SD Bridgham, RT Conant, SC Cook-Patton, PW Ellis, A Falucci, J Fourquerean, T Gopalakrishna, H Gu, B Henderson, MD Hurteau, KD Kroeger, T Kroeger, TJ Lark, SM Leavitt, G Lomax, RI McDonald, PJ Megonigal, DA Miteva, CJ Richardson, J Sanderman, D Shoch, SA Spawn, JW Veldman, CA Williams, PB Woodbury, C Zganjar, M Baranski, P Elias, RA Houghton, E Landis, E McGlynn, WH Schlesinger, JV Siikamaki, AE Sutton-Grier, BW Griscom. 2018. Natural climate solutions for the United States. Science Advances 4:eaat1869.
47. Goodwin, M.J.*, M.P. North, H.S.J. Zald, M.D. Hurteau. 2018. The 15-year post-treatment response of a mixed-conifer understory plant community to thinning and burning treatments. Forest Ecology and Management 229:617-624.
46. Liang, S.*, M.D. Hurteau, A.L. Westerling. 2018. Large-scale restoration increases carbon stability under projected climate and wildfire regimes. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 16:207-212.
45. Swanteson-Franz, R.J.*, D.J. Krocheck*, M.D. Hurteau. 2018. Quantifying forest carbon dynamics as a function of tree species composition and management under projected climate. Ecosphere 9(4):e02191.
44. Krofcheck, D.J.*, M.D. Hurteau, R.M. Scheller, E.L. Loudermilk. 2018. Prioritizing forest fuels treatments based on the probability of high-severity fire restores adaptive capacity in Sierran forests. Global Change Biology 24:729-737.
43. Scheller, R.M., A.M. Kretchun, E.L. Loudermilk, M.D. Hurteau, P.J. Weisberg, C. Skinner. 2018. Interactions among fuel management, species composition, bark beetles, and climate change and the potential effects on forests of the Lake Tahoe Basin. Ecosystems 21:643-656.
2017
42. Maestrini, B., E.C. Alvey, M.D. Hurteau, H. Safford, J.R. Miesel. 2017. Fire severity alters the distribution of pyrogenic carbon stocks across ecosystem pools in a Californian mixed-conifer forest. JGR-Biogeosciences 122:2338-2355.
41. Liang, S.*, M.D. Hurteau, A.L. Westerling. 2017. Potential decline in carbon carrying capacity under projected climate-wildfire interactions in the Sierra Nevada. Scientific Reports 7:2420.
40. Krofcheck D.J.*, M.D. Hurteau, R.M. Scheller, E.L. Loudermilk. 2017. Restoring surface fire stabilizes forest carbon under extreme fire weather in the Sierra Nevada. Ecosphere 8(1):e01663.
39. Hurteau M.D. 2017. Quantifying the carbon balance of forest restoration and wildfire under projected climate in the fire-prone southwestern US. PLoS ONE 12(1):e0169275.
38. Liang, S.*, M.D. Hurteau, A.L. Westerling. 2017. Response of Sierra Nevada forests to projected climate-wildfire interactions. Global Change Biology 23:2016-2030.
2016
37. Kretchun, A.M., E.L. Loudermilk, R.M. Scheller, M.D. Hurteau, S. Belmcheri. 2016. Climate and bark beetle effects on forest productivity: linking dendroecology with forest landscape modeling. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 46:1026-1034.
36. Laflower, D.M.*, M.D. Hurteau, G.W. Koch, M.P. North, B.A. Hungate. 2016. Climate-driven changes in forest succession and the influence of management on forest carbon dynamics in the Puget Lowlands of Washington State, USA. Forest Ecology and Management, 362:194-204.
35. Hurteau, M.D., S. Liang*, K.L. Martin*, M.P. North, G.W. Koch, B.A. Hungate. 2016. Restoring forest structure and process stabilizes forest carbon in wildfire-prone southwestern ponderosa pine forests. Ecological Applications, 26:382-391.
34. Buchholz, T., M.D. Hurteau, J. Gunn, D. Saah. 2016. A global meta-analysis of forest bioenergy greenhouse gas emission accounting studies. Global Change Biology Bioenergy, 8:281-289.
2015
33. Wiechmann, M.L.*, M.D. Hurteau, J.P. Kaye, J.R. Miesel. 2015. Macro-particle charcoal C content following prescribed burning in a mixed-conifer forest, Sierra Nevada, California. PLoS ONE 10(8):e0135014.
32. Wiechmann, M.L.*, M.D. Hurteau, M.P. North, G.W. Koch, L. Jerabkova. 2015. The carbon balance of reducing wildfire risk and restoring process: an analysis of 10-year post-treatment carbon dynamics in a mixed-conifer forest. Climatic Change, 132:709-719.
Only half of the table of C stock values is in the original article. The erratum with the full table is here.
31. Addington, R.N., S.J. Hudson, J.K. Hiers, M.D. Hurteau, T.F. Hutcherson, G. Matusick, J.M. Parker. 2015. Relationships among wildfire, prescribed fire, and drought in a fire-prone landscape in the southeastern United States. International Journal of Wildland Fire, 24:778-783.
30. Martin, K.L.*, M.D. Hurteau, B.A. Hungate, G.W. Koch, and M.P. North. 2015. Carbon tradeoffs of restoration and provision of endangered species habitat in a fire-maintained forest. Ecosystems, 18:76-88.
2014
29. Hurteau, M.D., A.L. Westerling, C. Wiedinmyer, and B.P. Bryant. 2014. Projected effects of climate and development on California wildfire emissions through 2100. Environmental Science and Technology, 48:2298-2304.
28. Earles, J.M., M.P. North, and M.D. Hurteau. 2014. Wildfire and drought dynamics destabilize carbon stores of fire-suppressed forests. Ecological Applications, 24:732-740.
27. Hurteau, M.D., T.A. Robards, D. Stevens*, D. Saah, M. North, and G.W. Koch. 2014. Modeling climate and fuel reduction impacts on mixed-conifer forest carbon stocks in the Sierra Nevada, California. Forest Ecology and Management, 315:30-42.
26. Dangal, S.R.S.*, B.S. Felzer, and M.D. Hurteau. 2014. Effects of agriculture and timber harvest in Eastern US forests. Journal of Geophysical Research - Biogeosciences, 119:35-54.
25. Hurteau, M.D., J.B. Bradford, P.Z. Fule, A.H. Taylor, and K.L. Martin*. 2014. Climate change, fire management and ecological services in the southwestern US. Forest Ecology and Management, 327:280-289.
2013
24. Kerhoulas, L.P., T.E. Kolb, M.D. Hurteau, and G.W. Koch. 2013. Managing for climate change adaptation in forests: a case study from the U.S. Southwest. Journal of Applied Ecology, 50:1311-1320.
23. Moritz, M.A., M.D. Hurteau, K.N. Suding, and C.M. D'Antonio. 2013. "Bounded ranges of variation" as a framework for future conservation and fire management. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, The Year in Ecology and Conservation Biology, 1286:92-107.
22. Hurteau, M.D., B.A. Hungate, G.W. Koch, M.P. North, and G.R. Smith. 2013. Aligning ecology and markets in the forest carbon cycle. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, 11:37-42.
21. Hurteau, M.D. 2013. Effects of wildland fire management on forest carbon stores. In Land use and the carbon cycle: science applications in human environment interactions. Eds, D.G. Brown, D.T. Robinson, N.H.F. French, and B.C. Reed. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge UK.
2011
20. Waddell, C.J.*, M.D. Hurteau, and D. Huntzinger. 2011. Product carbon footprinting: a proposed framework to increase confidence, reduce costs, and incorporate profit incentive. Carbon Management, 2:645-657.
19. North, M. and M. Hurteau. 2011. High-severity wildfire effects on carbon stocks and emissions in fuels treated and untreated forest. Forest Ecology and Management, 261:1115-1120.
18. Wu, T., Y-S. Kim, M.D. Hurteau. 2011. Cutting trees to save forests: using economic incentives to overcome barriers to forest restoration. Restoration Ecology, 19:441-445.
17. Hurteau, M.D. and M.L. Brooks. 2011. Short- and long-term effects of fire on carbon in US dry temperate forest systems. BioScience, 61:139-146.
16. Hurteau, M.D., M.T. Stoddard, and P.Z. Fule. 2011. The carbon costs of mitigating high-severity wildfire in southwestern ponderosa pine. Global Change Biology, 17:1516-1521.
2010
15. Hurteau, M.D. and C. Wiedinmyer. 2010. Response to comment on "Prescribed fire as a means of reducing forest carbon emissions in the Western United States". Environmental Science and Technology, 44:6521.
14. Wiedinmyer, C. and M.D. Hurteau. 2010. Prescribed fire as a means of reducing forest carbon emissions in the western US. Environmental Science and Technology, 44:1926-1932.
13. Hurteau, M.D. and M. North. 2010. Carbon recovery rates following different wildfire risk mitigation treatments. Forest Ecology and Management, 260:930-937.
2009
12. Hurteau, M. and M. North. 2009. Fuel treatment effects on tree-based carbon storage under modeled wildfire scenarios. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, 7:409-414.
11. Hurteau, M., M. North, and T. Foin. 2009. Modeling the influence of precipitation and nitrogen deposition on forest understory fuel connectivity in Sierra Nevada mixed-conifer forest. Ecological Modelling, 220:2460-2468.
10. Mignone, B.K., M.D. Hurteau, Y. Chen, and B. Sohngen. 2009. Carbon offsets, reversal risk and US climate policy. Carbon Balance and Management, 4:3.
9. Hurteau, M.D., B.A. Hungate, and G.W. Koch. 2009. Accounting for risk in valuing forest carbon offsets. Carbon Balance and Management, 4:1.
8. North, M., M. Hurteau, and J. Innes. 2009. Fire suppression and fuels treatment effects on mixed-conifer carbon stocks and emissions. Ecological Applications, 19:1385-1396.
7. Hurteau, M. and M. North. 2009. Response of Arnica dealbata to climate change, nitrogen deposition, and fire. Plant Ecology, 202:191-194.
2008
6. Hurteau, M.D., G.W. Koch, and B.A. Hungate. 2008. Carbon protection and fire risk reduction: toward a full accounting of forest carbon offsets. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, 6:493-498.
5. Hurteau, M. and M. North. 2008. Mixed-conifer understory response to climate change, nitrogen, and fire. Global Change Biology, 14:1543-1552.
2001-2007
4. Hurteau, M., H. Zald, M. North. 2007. Species-specific response to climate reconstruction in upper-elevation mixed-conifer forests of the western Sierra Nevada, California. Canadian Journal of Forest Research, 37:1681-1691.
3. North, M., M. Hurteau, R. Fiegener, and M. Barbour. 2005. Influence of fire and El Niño on tree recruitment varies by species in Sierran mixed conifer. Forest Science, 51:187-197.
2. Hurteau, M., M. Stoddard, and B. Oberhardt. 2001. Sampling method captures vegetation and wildlife data in sagebrush-grassland ecosystem (Arizona). Ecological Restoration, 19:267-268.
1. Alcoze, T. and M. Hurteau. 2001. Implementing the archeo-environmental reconstruction technique: rediscovering the historic ground layer of three plant communities in the greater Grand Canyon Region. In The Historical Ecology Handbook. Eds, Dave Egan and Evelyn Howell, Island Press, Covelo, CA.