Burning Questions: The LIM Team’s responses to questions from the online workshop

Burning Questions: The LIM Team’s responses to questions from the online workshop

The Landscapes in Motion Online Workshop was a great experience for our research team. It was an afternoon marked by great questions and exciting discussion. So much so, we ran out of time to answer several of the great questions posed by the participants! In this post, members of our team have responded to these questions.

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A more realistic model, a more diverse landscape: Findings of the Modelling Team

A more realistic model, a more diverse landscape: Findings of the Modelling Team

There are many different ways to look at the landscapes and forests of Alberta’s Foothills. In this piece we enter a sophisticated landscape simulation with the Modeling team and watch how landscapes and biodiversity respond to fire when we take partial mortality into account.

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Why model partial mortality?

Why model partial mortality?

One potential consequence of mixed severity fire regimes is that some trees may survive lower intensity fires. This phenomenon is called “partial mortality”, and it can have a variety of consequences for what the landscape looks like and becomes after a fire. When trees survive, they may offer refuge for wildlife, help speed up revegetation by producing seeds, and/or help to maintain the presence of other types of vegetation like lichens. In this blog post, we discuss how the Landscapes in Motion modeling team is studying partial mortality in the Southern Foothills of Alberta using simulation models, and why this research is important for understanding the fire history of this region.

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Meet the Modelling Team!

Meet the Modelling Team!

Our field teams collect a massive amount of data from mountaintops and forests across the Eastern slopes of the Rockies. Because our team has the good fortune of such a big dataset, we can ask questions at a broader scale than a lot of other projects - we are even starting to predict what the future of these landscapes might look like.

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