Post Fire Vegetation Regeneration During Abnormally Dry Years Following Severe Montane Fire - Southern Alberta, Canada

This paper investigates the patterns of post-fire vegetation regeneration in two climatically distinct sites in Waterton Lakes National Park, Canada, following a severe montane fire and subsequent abnormally dry conditions. The study aimed to quantify the recovery trajectories of herbaceous understory and conifer seedlings over five years, revealing that site environmental conditions were more influential than inter-annual drought in determining recovery. Notably, the moist site exhibited greater herbaceous biomass accumulation while the drier site demonstrated significantly higher lodgepole pine seedling recruitment, indicating a complex ecological resilience to drought in fire-prone montane ecosystems. This paper affirmed the utility of remotely piloted aircraft systems for spatially monitoring changes in vegetation height, cover, and biomass after a disturbance.

Data and Materials

Organization

University of Lethbridge

No description provided

Additional Info

Field Value
Author J. Aspinall, L. Chasmer, C.A. Coburn, C. Hopkinson
Publication Year 2025
Last Updated January 28, 2026, 19:25 (UTC)
Created January 28, 2026, 18:08 (UTC)