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Ecological succession / Fire / Controlled burn / Pinus taeda / Pinus elliottii / Pituophis ruthveni / Flora of the United States / Pinus palustris / Wildfires


Eighteen months after a 1998 Florida wildfire, a longleaf and slash pine forest begins to come back to life. Credit: Kenneth Outcalt. Modifying FOFEM to Predict Mortality of the Longleaf Pine Species Summary
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Document Date: 2010-09-03 11:07:19


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City

Brewton / Andalusia / Missoula / Washington / /

Company

National Wildfire Coordinating Group / Layout RED Inc. / /

Country

United States / /

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Event

Natural Disaster / Man-Made Disaster / /

Facility

Hall Clemson / Forest Service Fire Science Laboratory / Education Center / /

IndustryTerm

energy / Web Resources FOFEM / management tool / software testing / /

NaturalFeature

Kisatchie National Forest / Escambia Experimental Forest / Forest Ecologist / /

Organization

Solon Dixon Forestry and Education Center / Washington office of Fire / USDA Forest Service / National Interagency Fire Center / federal government / International Union for Conservation of Nature / Forest Service Fire Science Laboratory / Forest Service / Clemson University Department of Forestry and Natural Resources / /

Person

Geoff Wang / J. Kevin Hiers / Kenneth Outcalt / Steve Shively / /

/

Position

applied Forest Ecologist / Tim Swedberg Communication Director / Principal Investigator / Governor / co-principal investigator / Writer / www.firescience.gov Scientist / Director Timothy_Swedberg@nifc.blm.gov Communication / www.firescience.gov John Cissel Program Manager / /

ProgrammingLanguage

php / /

ProvinceOrState

Texas / Virginia / Alabama / Louisiana / Carolinas / Montana / South Carolina / Florida / Georgia / /

Region

Southeastern United States / South Florida / /

Technology

ESA / PDF / /

URL

http /

SocialTag