Daniel B. Fagre, Ph.D. (Former Employee)
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 82
Coping with climate change Coping with climate change
What have we learned so far about how climate change is affecting our global environment? Studies show that it adversely affects human and natural systems by • reducing biodiversity • altering hydrological systems • impairing biological and chemical cycles • making it more difficult to restore degraded ecosystems Climate is not the only factor in the deterioration of natural systems.We...
Authors
Tony Prato, Daniel Fagre
Long-duration drought variability and impacts on ecosystem services: A case study from Glacier National Park, Montana Long-duration drought variability and impacts on ecosystem services: A case study from Glacier National Park, Montana
Instrumental climate records suggest that summer precipitation and winter snowpack in Glacier National Park (Glacier NP), Montana, vary significantly over decadal to multidecadal time scales. Because instrumental records for the region are limited to the twentieth century, knowledge of the range of variability associated with these moisture anomalies and their impacts on ecosystems and...
Authors
Gregory Pederson, Stephen T. Gray, Daniel Fagre, Lisa Graumlich
Global-scale environmental changes in mountain protected areas: The CLIMET project Global-scale environmental changes in mountain protected areas: The CLIMET project
No abstract available.
Authors
Daniel Fagre, D. Peterson
Topography and vegetation as predictors of snow water equivalent across the alpine treeline ecotone at Lee Ridge, Glacier National Park, Montana, U.S.A. Topography and vegetation as predictors of snow water equivalent across the alpine treeline ecotone at Lee Ridge, Glacier National Park, Montana, U.S.A.
We derived and implemented two spatial models of May snow water equivalent (SWE) at Lee Ridge in Glacier National Park, Montana. We used the models to test the hypothesis that vegetation structure is a control on snow redistribution at the alpine treeline ecotone (ATE). The statistical models were derived using stepwise and “best” subsets regression techniques. The first model was...
Authors
C. Geddes, Daniel Brown, Daniel Fagre
National parks and protected areas: Appoaches for balancing social, economic, and ecological values National parks and protected areas: Appoaches for balancing social, economic, and ecological values
The balance of nature in any strict sense has been upset long ago…The only option we have is to create a new balance objectively determined for each area in accordance with the intended use of that area.” --Aldo Leopold, 1927, in a letter to the Superintendent of Glacier National Park The planning and management staff of state/national parks and protected areas face a complex set of...
Authors
Tony Prato, Daniel Fagre
Assessing climate change effects on mountain ecosystems using integrated models: A case study Assessing climate change effects on mountain ecosystems using integrated models: A case study
Mountain systems are characterized by strong environmental gradients, rugged topography and extreme spatial heterogeneity in ecosystem structure and composition. Consequently, most mountainous areas have relatively high rates of endemism and biodiversity, and function as species refugia in many areas of the world. Mountains have long been recognized as critical entities in regional...
Authors
Daniel Fagre, Steven Running, Robert Keane, David Peterson
USA: Glacier National Park, Biosphere Reserve and GLORIA Site USA: Glacier National Park, Biosphere Reserve and GLORIA Site
The National Park Service of the United States has 388 designated protected areas and parks that include historic and cultural sites as well as ‘natural resource’ parks set aside for their unique and outstanding natural features. Early efforts to create parks were focused on areas of beauty or unusual features but later efforts increasingly aimed to protect biodiversity and intact...
Authors
Daniel Fagre
Natural avalanches and transportation: A case study from Glacier National Park, Montana, USA Natural avalanches and transportation: A case study from Glacier National Park, Montana, USA
In January 2004, two natural avalanches (destructive class 3) derailed a freight train in John F. Stevens Canyon, on the southern boundary of Glacier National Park. The railroad tracks were closed for 29 hours due to cleanup and lingering avalanche hazard, backing up 112km of trains and shutting down Amtrak’s passenger service. The incident marked the fourth time in three winters that...
Authors
B.A. Reardon, Daniel Fagre, R.W. Steiner
Taking the pulse of mountains: Ecosystem responses to climatic variability Taking the pulse of mountains: Ecosystem responses to climatic variability
An integrated program of ecosystem modeling and field studies in the mountains of the Pacific Northwest (U.S.A.) has quantified many of the ecological processes affected by climatic variability. Paleoecological and contemporary ecological data in forest ecosystems provided model parameterization and validation at broad spatial and temporal scales for tree growth, tree regeneration and...
Authors
Daniel Fagre, David Peterson, Amy Hessl
Transforming the Rockies: Human forces, settlement patterns, and ecosystem effects Transforming the Rockies: Human forces, settlement patterns, and ecosystem effects
The current ecological condition of the Rocky Mountains can be viewed from two somewhat opposing perspectives. The first is that human occupation has had relatively little effect on the Rockies: large natural, if not pristine, areas remain, and the region's open spaces provide wildlife habitat, majestic scenery, and a sense of wildness. Unlike the situation in, say, the Swiss Alps, where...
Authors
William Travis, David Theobald, Daniel Fagre
Hydrologic processes and nutrient dynamics in a pristine mountain catchment Hydrologic processes and nutrient dynamics in a pristine mountain catchment
Nutrient dynamics in watersheds have been used as an ecosystem-level indicator of overall ecosystem function or response to disturbance (e.g. Borman.N et al. 1974, WEBSTER et al. 1992). The examination of nutrients has been evaluated to determine responses to logging practices or other changes in watershed land use. Nutrient dynamics have been related to changing physical and biological
Authors
F. Richard Hauer, Daniel Fagre, Jack Stanford
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 82
Coping with climate change Coping with climate change
What have we learned so far about how climate change is affecting our global environment? Studies show that it adversely affects human and natural systems by • reducing biodiversity • altering hydrological systems • impairing biological and chemical cycles • making it more difficult to restore degraded ecosystems Climate is not the only factor in the deterioration of natural systems.We...
Authors
Tony Prato, Daniel Fagre
Long-duration drought variability and impacts on ecosystem services: A case study from Glacier National Park, Montana Long-duration drought variability and impacts on ecosystem services: A case study from Glacier National Park, Montana
Instrumental climate records suggest that summer precipitation and winter snowpack in Glacier National Park (Glacier NP), Montana, vary significantly over decadal to multidecadal time scales. Because instrumental records for the region are limited to the twentieth century, knowledge of the range of variability associated with these moisture anomalies and their impacts on ecosystems and...
Authors
Gregory Pederson, Stephen T. Gray, Daniel Fagre, Lisa Graumlich
Global-scale environmental changes in mountain protected areas: The CLIMET project Global-scale environmental changes in mountain protected areas: The CLIMET project
No abstract available.
Authors
Daniel Fagre, D. Peterson
Topography and vegetation as predictors of snow water equivalent across the alpine treeline ecotone at Lee Ridge, Glacier National Park, Montana, U.S.A. Topography and vegetation as predictors of snow water equivalent across the alpine treeline ecotone at Lee Ridge, Glacier National Park, Montana, U.S.A.
We derived and implemented two spatial models of May snow water equivalent (SWE) at Lee Ridge in Glacier National Park, Montana. We used the models to test the hypothesis that vegetation structure is a control on snow redistribution at the alpine treeline ecotone (ATE). The statistical models were derived using stepwise and “best” subsets regression techniques. The first model was...
Authors
C. Geddes, Daniel Brown, Daniel Fagre
National parks and protected areas: Appoaches for balancing social, economic, and ecological values National parks and protected areas: Appoaches for balancing social, economic, and ecological values
The balance of nature in any strict sense has been upset long ago…The only option we have is to create a new balance objectively determined for each area in accordance with the intended use of that area.” --Aldo Leopold, 1927, in a letter to the Superintendent of Glacier National Park The planning and management staff of state/national parks and protected areas face a complex set of...
Authors
Tony Prato, Daniel Fagre
Assessing climate change effects on mountain ecosystems using integrated models: A case study Assessing climate change effects on mountain ecosystems using integrated models: A case study
Mountain systems are characterized by strong environmental gradients, rugged topography and extreme spatial heterogeneity in ecosystem structure and composition. Consequently, most mountainous areas have relatively high rates of endemism and biodiversity, and function as species refugia in many areas of the world. Mountains have long been recognized as critical entities in regional...
Authors
Daniel Fagre, Steven Running, Robert Keane, David Peterson
USA: Glacier National Park, Biosphere Reserve and GLORIA Site USA: Glacier National Park, Biosphere Reserve and GLORIA Site
The National Park Service of the United States has 388 designated protected areas and parks that include historic and cultural sites as well as ‘natural resource’ parks set aside for their unique and outstanding natural features. Early efforts to create parks were focused on areas of beauty or unusual features but later efforts increasingly aimed to protect biodiversity and intact...
Authors
Daniel Fagre
Natural avalanches and transportation: A case study from Glacier National Park, Montana, USA Natural avalanches and transportation: A case study from Glacier National Park, Montana, USA
In January 2004, two natural avalanches (destructive class 3) derailed a freight train in John F. Stevens Canyon, on the southern boundary of Glacier National Park. The railroad tracks were closed for 29 hours due to cleanup and lingering avalanche hazard, backing up 112km of trains and shutting down Amtrak’s passenger service. The incident marked the fourth time in three winters that...
Authors
B.A. Reardon, Daniel Fagre, R.W. Steiner
Taking the pulse of mountains: Ecosystem responses to climatic variability Taking the pulse of mountains: Ecosystem responses to climatic variability
An integrated program of ecosystem modeling and field studies in the mountains of the Pacific Northwest (U.S.A.) has quantified many of the ecological processes affected by climatic variability. Paleoecological and contemporary ecological data in forest ecosystems provided model parameterization and validation at broad spatial and temporal scales for tree growth, tree regeneration and...
Authors
Daniel Fagre, David Peterson, Amy Hessl
Transforming the Rockies: Human forces, settlement patterns, and ecosystem effects Transforming the Rockies: Human forces, settlement patterns, and ecosystem effects
The current ecological condition of the Rocky Mountains can be viewed from two somewhat opposing perspectives. The first is that human occupation has had relatively little effect on the Rockies: large natural, if not pristine, areas remain, and the region's open spaces provide wildlife habitat, majestic scenery, and a sense of wildness. Unlike the situation in, say, the Swiss Alps, where...
Authors
William Travis, David Theobald, Daniel Fagre
Hydrologic processes and nutrient dynamics in a pristine mountain catchment Hydrologic processes and nutrient dynamics in a pristine mountain catchment
Nutrient dynamics in watersheds have been used as an ecosystem-level indicator of overall ecosystem function or response to disturbance (e.g. Borman.N et al. 1974, WEBSTER et al. 1992). The examination of nutrients has been evaluated to determine responses to logging practices or other changes in watershed land use. Nutrient dynamics have been related to changing physical and biological
Authors
F. Richard Hauer, Daniel Fagre, Jack Stanford