
#15 | Burning outside the dormant season on pine survival and growth, ft. Dr. Morgan Varner & John Willis
Fire University · University of Florida
Audio is streamed directly from the publisher (traffic.libsyn.com) as published in their RSS feed. Play Podcasts does not host this file. Rights-holders can request removal through the copyright & takedown page.
Show Notes
Due to concerns of damaging tree productivity, most prescribed burning has become limited to the dormant season, a practice that is inconsistent with the historical pattern of lighting-initiated fire. How different are the effects of seasonal biennial burning and which factors play the biggest role in survival? In this episode, Dr. Marcus Lashley turns to experts Dr. Morgan Varner, Director of Fire Research at Tall Timbers, and John Willis, Forest Researcher with the U.S. Forest Service, to break down the science behind the effects that varying seasonal burns have on pine survival and growth.
This podcast is supported by listener donations - thank you for being a part of this effort.
Resources:
Epsiode Host: Dr. Marcus Lashley - @DrDisturbance
Guest: Dr. Morgan J Varner
Guest: John Willis - Southern Research Station, Forest Service (USDA)
- Study mentioned in this episode: Willis et al. 2021: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1FQaFRtVxslTwoMz2yXsB6I_pCU9Gixax/view
For more information, follow WELaM lab on Instagram (@welamecology) and Youtube (@UF_WELaM); and UF DEER Lab on Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, YouTube (@ufgamelab).
Have suggestions for future episodes? Send us your feedback! (here)
Check out our newest podcast, Wild Turkey Science!
Enroll now in our free, online fire course. Available to all.