Sierra Nevada
Forest Dynamics:
Understanding the Pattern and Pace of Change
A Summary of Research
Findings of the Sierra Nevada Global Change Research Program
Gorge of Despair, Cobra Turret, Kings Canyon National Park, California
Mountain ecosystems, with their geographic compression of climatic gradients and biological comunities, offer unique opportunities for exploring the relationships among climate, disturbance, and forest response. Taking advantage of these opportunities, The Sierra Nevada Global Change Research Project (SNGCRP) began in 1991. Originally funded by the National Park Service, and now funded by the Biological Resources Division of the U.S. Geological Survey, the program has involved more than 20 scientists from ten research institutions. The program set out to explore the fundamental character and significance of forest changes driven by the two most powerful agents of change in the Sierra Nevada: climate and fire. Studies are organized around three time periods: past, present and future. This organizational approach--modern mechanistic studies and extensive paleoecological studies informing one another under the integrative framework of state-of-the-art computer models--is a uniquely powerful way of exploring the character and significance of forest change. The diagram below summarizes how the project organization.
Select a topic to view research in that area:

Climate and Tree
Growth
Conifer Physiology | Forest Demography | Species-Environment Relationships
Tree Growth Model
| Forest Dynamics Model | Fire Behavior and Spread Model
Fuel Dynamics Model
Paleo-Fire
(tree-ring data) | Paleo-Climate
| Paleo-Vegetation
Paleo-Fire (charcoal data)
View the complete SNGC bibliography
To learn more about how Sierra Nevada Global
Change Research relates to overall Global Change research, click here!
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Sierra Nevada Global
Change Project Education Page
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List of Principal Investigators (PIs)
Questions? Contact a PI or Mike
Broyles
Last Updated 9 June 1998