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Post-Fire Management and Restoration of Southern European Forests [electronic resource] / edited by Francisco Moreira, Margarita Arianoutsou, Piermaria Corona, Jorge De las Heras.

Por: Colaborador(es): Tipo de material: TextoTextoSeries Managing Forest Ecosystems ; 24 | Managing Forest Ecosystems ; 24Editor: Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands, 2012Descripción: X, 330 p. online resourceTipo de contenido:
  • text
Tipo de medio:
  • computer
Tipo de soporte:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9789400722088
Trabajos contenidos:
  • SpringerLink (Online service)
Tema(s): Formatos físicos adicionales: Sin títuloClasificación CDD:
  • 634.92 23
Clasificación LoC:
  • QH545.F67
Recursos en línea:
Contenidos:
Springer eBooksResumen: In spite of all the efforts made in fire prevention and suppression, every year about 45 000 forest fires occur in Europe, burning ca. 0.5 million hectares of forests and other rural lands. The management of these burned forests has been given much less attention than fire prevention or fire suppression issues, but the post-fire management of burned areas raises strong concerns (economic and social impacts, soil erosion and water quality, biodiversity loss, forest restoration). Although there are a few publications which address post-fire management, the focus of these has been either on general approaches to restoration or specific topics such as preventing post-fire soil erosion. This book is about the post-fire management of fire-prone forest types in southern Europe. It provides the first comprehensive overview of the topic, ranging from stand-level to landscape-level management, and from emergency actions to long-term restoration approaches. The book is divided into 2 major sections. The first includes five chapters where transversal topics such as recent changes in fire regimes in Southern Europe, the economic, legal and social aspects of post-fire management, fire hazard and flammability of different forest types, and post-fire management approaches, are addressed. The second section is divided in seven chapters, with a similar structure, each one dealing with the forest types more affected by wildfires in Europe (and other fire prone habitats such as shrublands),. The book is targeted to an audience of professionals (forest managers, landscape planners, and forest agency staff), graduate students and researchers. It is the first publication to access in comprehensive way post-fire management issues in European forests, for which only fragmented knowledge through specialized or grey literature was available so far.
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1. Setting the Scene for Post-Fire Management -- 2. Land Cover Change and Fire Regime in the European Mediterranean Region -- 3. Economic, Legal and Social Aspects of Post-Fire Management -- 4. Fire Hazard and Flammability of European Forest Types -- 5. Fire Ecology and Post-Fire Restoration Approaches in Southern European Forest Types -- 6. Post-Fire Management of Serotinous Pine Forests -- 7. Post-Fire Management of Non Serotinous Pine Forests -- 8. Post-Fire Management of Mediterranean Broadleaved Forests -- 9. Post-Fire Management of Cork Oak Forests -- 10. Post Fire Management of Exotic Forests -- 11. Management of Threatened, High Conservation Value Forest Hotspots Under Changing Fire Regimes -- 12. Post-Fire Management of Shrublands -- Index.

In spite of all the efforts made in fire prevention and suppression, every year about 45 000 forest fires occur in Europe, burning ca. 0.5 million hectares of forests and other rural lands. The management of these burned forests has been given much less attention than fire prevention or fire suppression issues, but the post-fire management of burned areas raises strong concerns (economic and social impacts, soil erosion and water quality, biodiversity loss, forest restoration). Although there are a few publications which address post-fire management, the focus of these has been either on general approaches to restoration or specific topics such as preventing post-fire soil erosion. This book is about the post-fire management of fire-prone forest types in southern Europe. It provides the first comprehensive overview of the topic, ranging from stand-level to landscape-level management, and from emergency actions to long-term restoration approaches. The book is divided into 2 major sections. The first includes five chapters where transversal topics such as recent changes in fire regimes in Southern Europe, the economic, legal and social aspects of post-fire management, fire hazard and flammability of different forest types, and post-fire management approaches, are addressed. The second section is divided in seven chapters, with a similar structure, each one dealing with the forest types more affected by wildfires in Europe (and other fire prone habitats such as shrublands),. The book is targeted to an audience of professionals (forest managers, landscape planners, and forest agency staff), graduate students and researchers. It is the first publication to access in comprehensive way post-fire management issues in European forests, for which only fragmented knowledge through specialized or grey literature was available so far.

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