Avery P. Hill
Avery P. Hill
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Type
Journal article
Op-Ed
Date
2023
2021
2018
Low-Elevation Conifers in California's Sierra Nevada Are out of Equilibrium with Climate
Warming climatic conditions over the last century have led to observable shifts in the spatial organization of dominant tree species in California’s Sierra Nevada. Little is known, however, about the extent to which these shifts have tracked the magnitude of climate change. This study maps Vegetation Climate Mismatch in the Sierra Nevada—areas where climate change has left trees in climatic conditions where they have not historically occurred. Different vegetation types support different wildfire regimes, ecosystems, and ecosystem services. Our maps will be useful for anticipating vegetation transitions and informing long-term wildfire and ecosystem management across the Sierra Nevada mountains of California.
Avery P. Hill
,
Connor J. Nolan
,
Kyle S. Hemes
,
Trevor W. Cambron
,
Christopher B. Field
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DOI
Forest Fires and Climate-Induced Tree Range Shifts in the Western US
Due to climate change, plant populations experience environmental conditions to which they are not adapted. Our understanding of the …
Avery P. Hill
,
Christopher B. Field
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DOI
A Systematic Global Stocktake of Evidence on Human Adaptation to Climate Change
Assessing global progress on human adaptation to climate change is an urgent priority. Although the literature on adaptation to climate …
Lea Berrang-Ford
,
A. R. Siders
,
Et Al.
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DOI
Even Fire-Adapted Giant Sequoias Can't Withstand California's Megafires
Wildfires are passing the threshold from existential necessity to existential threat for ecosystems around the world.
Avery P. Hill
,
Christopher B. Field
,
Noah S. Diffenbaugh
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Cities as Refugia for Ecosystems Adrift
The facilitation of urban ecosystems helps preserve the important relations between many species. With strategic design, urban …
Avery P. Hill
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Rethinking "Native" in the Anthropocene
"The Anthropocene" is challenging the established conceptions of biogeography. In an age of widespread disturbance, global …
Avery P. Hill
,
Elizabeth A. Hadly
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DOI
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