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Bill
Romme is a professor of fire ecology in the Department of Forest,
Rangeland, and Watershed Stewardship at Colorado State University.
Dr. Romme holds a PhD from the University of Wyoming, and has studied
fire history and successional dynamics of aspen forests in Yellowstone
National Park, on the east and west slope of Colorado, and on the
Kaibab Plateau.
Email: romme@cnr.colostate.edu
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Variability
in Historical Aspen Dynamics: Implications for Current Restoration
Priorities, Abstract
Aspen occupies millions
of acres in the west, occurs in a wide variety of environmental
settings, and exhibits a diversity of successional dynamics. Four
general types of aspen dynamics can be recognized: stable or persistent
aspen, seral aspen in no imminent danger of being lost, seral aspen
in danger of disappearing within a single generation, and deteriorating
aspen being replaced by herbs or shrubs. I will present examples
of each type of aspen forest, suggest some of the major spatial
and geographical patterns of distribution of each type, and evaluate
each in terms of the urgency for restoration. |
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