James R. Snyder
United States Geological Survey
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by James R. Snyder.
International Journal of Wildland Fire | 2006
Jay P. Sah; Michael S. Ross; James R. Snyder; Suzanne Koptur; Hillary C. Cooley
In forests, the effects of different life forms on fire behavior may vary depending on their contributions to total fuel loads. We examined the distribution of fuel components before fire, their effects on fire behavior, and the effects of fire on subsequent fuel recovery in pine forests within the National Key Deer Refuge in the Florida Keys. We conducted a burning experiment in six blocks, within each of which we assigned 1-ha plots to three treatments: control, summer, and winter burn. Owing to logistical constraints, we burned only 11 plots, three in winter and eight in summer, over a 4-year period from 1998 to 2001. We used path analysis to model the effects of fuel type and char height, an indicator of fire intensity, on fuel consumption. Fire intensity increased with surface fuel loads, but was negatively related to the quantity of hardwood shrub fuels, probably because these fuels are associated with a moist microenvironment within hardwood patches, and therefore tend to resist fire. Winter fires were milder than summer fires, and were less effective at inhibiting shrub encroachment. A mixed seasonal approach is suggested for fire management, with burns applied opportunistically under a range of winter and summer conditions, but more frequently than that prevalent in the recent past.
Wetlands | 2012
Adam C. Watts; Leda N. Kobziar; James R. Snyder
Fire periodically affects wetland forests, particularly in landscapes with extensive fire-prone uplands. Rare occurrence and difficulty of access have limited efforts to understand impacts of wildfires fires in wetlands. Following a 2009 wildfire, we measured tree mortality and structural changes in wetland forest patches. Centers of these circular landscape features experienced lower fire severity, although no continuous patch-size or edge effect was evident. Initial survival of the dominant tree, pondcypress (Taxodium distichum var. imbricarium), was high (>99%), but within one year of the fire approximately 23% of trees died. Delayed mortality was correlated with fire severity, but unrelated to other hypothesized factors such as patch size or edge distance. Tree diameter and soil elevation were important predictors of mortality, with smaller trees and those in areas with lower elevation more likely to die following severe fire. Depressional cypress forests typically exhibit increasing tree size towards their interiors, and differential mortality patterns were related to edge distance. These patterns result in the exaggeration of a dome-shaped profile. Our observations quantify roles of fire and hydrology in determining cypress mortality in these swamps, and imply the existence of feedbacks that maintain the characteristic shape of cypress domes.
Forest Ecology and Management | 2004
Jay P. Sah; Michael S. Ross; Suzanne Koptur; James R. Snyder
Natural Areas Journal | 2005
Hong Liu; Eric S. Menges; James R. Snyder; Suzanne Koptur; Michael S. Ross
Open-File Report | 2005
James R. Snyder; Michael S. Ross; Suzanne Koptur; Jay P. Sah
Archive | 2003
Michael S. Ross; Jay P. Sah; Pablo L. Ruiz; David T. Jones; Hillary C. Cooley; Rafael Travieso; James R. Snyder; Curt Schaeffer
Fire Ecology | 2012
John D. Lloyd; Gary L. Slater; James R. Snyder
Archive | 2009
Jay P. Sah; Michael S. Ross; James R. Snyder; Pablo L. Ruiz; Susana Stofella; Mike Kline; Broke Shamblin; Erin J. Hanan; Lawrence Lopez; T.J. Hilton
Archive | 2007
John D. Lloyd; Gary L. Slater; Skip Snow; James R. Snyder
Archive | 2012
Pablo L. Ruiz; Jay P. Sah; James R. Snyder; Michael S. Ross