Previous Research for Dendroecological Analyses of Historic Disturbance Regimes

 

Bolstad, P. V. et al. 2001. Forest productivity, leaf area, and terrain in southern Appalachian deciduous forests. Forest Science 47:419-427.

Elliott, K. J. et al. 1999. Vegetation dynamics after a prescribed fire in the southern Appalachians. Forest Ecology and Management 114:119-213

Fritts, H. C., and T. W. Swetnam. 1989. Dendroecology: A tool for evaluating variations in past and present forest environments. Advances in Ecological Research 19:111-188

Grissino-Mayer, H. D. et al. 1997. The international tree-ring data bank program library version 2.1 user's manual. University of Arizona, Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research, Tucson, AZ

Hunter, M. D., and R. E. Forkner. 1999. Hurricane damage influences foliar polyphenolics and subsequent herbivory on surviving trees. Ecology 80:2676-2682

Lorimer, C. G., and L. E. Frelich. 1989. A method for estimating canopy disturbance frequency
and intensity in dense temperate forests. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 19:651-663

Orwig, D. A., and M. D. Abrams. 1995. Dendroecological and ecophysiological analysis of gap environments in mixed-oak understories of northern Virginia. Functional Ecology 9:799-806.


Orwig, D. A., and M. D. Abrams. 1999. Impacts of early selective logging on the dendroecology of an old-growth, bottomland hemlock-white pine-northern hardwood forest on the Allegheny Plateau. Journal of the Torrey Botanical Society 126:234-244.

Wright, C.J. and D.C. Coleman. 2000. Cross-site comparison of soil microbial biomass, soil nutrient status, and nematode trophic groups. Pedobiologia 44: 2-23.