Every year, the health of each of the thousands of trees in established research plots is checked, and if a tree has died, the cause of death is determined.
Nathan Stephenson
Dr. Nathan Stephenson is a Scientist Emeritus at the Western Ecological Research Center.
Earth’s vast forests provide human communities with irreplaceable goods and services such as carbon sequestration, hydrologic regulation, clean water, biodiversity, critical wildlife habitat, wood products, and recreational and spiritual opportunities. An overarching goal of Dr. Nathan Stephenson's research is to improve scientists' and land managers' ability to understand, forecast, and adapt to the effects of ongoing global changes – particularly changing climatic and disturbance regimes – on forests.
Accordingly, most of his research falls in three broad, complementary themes: (1) improving mechanistic understanding of forest and carbon dynamics, (2) detection, attribution, and interpretation of forest changes, and (3) adaptations to rapid global changes. The last theme extends well beyond forests, to natural areas in general.
RESEARCH INTERESTS
- Forest ecology
- Global change biology
- Climate change
- Fire ecology
- Natural areas management
- Adaptation
EDUCATION
- Ph.D., Ecology and Systematics, Cornell University, 1988
- B.S., Biological Sciences, University of California, Irvine, 1979
Science and Products
Cross-Park RAD Project (CPRP): A Case Study in Four National Parks Investigating How Institutional Context and Emotions Shape Manager Decisions to Resist, Accept, or Direct Change in Transforming Ecosystems
Forest health and drought response
Post-Fire Conifer Regeneration Under a Warming Climate: Will Severe Fire Be a Catalyst for Forest Loss?
Adaptations to Rapid Change
Improving Understanding of Forest and Carbon Dynamics
Detection, Attribution, and Interpretation of Forest Changes
Ellsworth Huntington’s (1914) Giant Sequoia Ages and Tree-Ring Measurements from 458 Stumps in Sequoia National Forest and Mountain Home Grove Ellsworth Huntington’s (1914) Giant Sequoia Ages and Tree-Ring Measurements from 458 Stumps in Sequoia National Forest and Mountain Home Grove
poscrptR poscrptR
Sequoia and Yosemite National Parks Mortality and Fire Data (1990-2019) for Competition-Fire-Drought Interaction Analysis Sequoia and Yosemite National Parks Mortality and Fire Data (1990-2019) for Competition-Fire-Drought Interaction Analysis
Seed source, not drought, determines patterns of seed production in Sierra Nevada conifers Seed source, not drought, determines patterns of seed production in Sierra Nevada conifers
Data for Use in poscrptR Post-fire Conifer Regeneration Prediction Model Data for Use in poscrptR Post-fire Conifer Regeneration Prediction Model
Forest Structure Data for Burned and Unburned Sites at Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks Forest Structure Data for Burned and Unburned Sites at Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks
Every year, the health of each of the thousands of trees in established research plots is checked, and if a tree has died, the cause of death is determined.
A western white pine (Pinus monticola) in Kings Canyon National Park, Calif., towers over USGS ecologist Nathan Stephenson.
A western white pine (Pinus monticola) in Kings Canyon National Park, Calif., towers over USGS ecologist Nathan Stephenson.
California's hotter drought has already killed millions of trees, particularly in low-elevation forests.
California's hotter drought has already killed millions of trees, particularly in low-elevation forests.
Giant sequoias have fared better than other tree species in California's recent hotter drought, but many have shown unprecedented foliage dieback in response to the drought.
Giant sequoias have fared better than other tree species in California's recent hotter drought, but many have shown unprecedented foliage dieback in response to the drought.
Effects of recent wildfires on giant sequoia groves were anomalous at millennial timescales: a response to Hanson et al. Effects of recent wildfires on giant sequoia groves were anomalous at millennial timescales: a response to Hanson et al.
The relationship between maturation size and maximum tree size from tropical to boreal climates The relationship between maturation size and maximum tree size from tropical to boreal climates
Post-fire reference densities for giant sequoia seedlings in a new era of high-severity wildfires Post-fire reference densities for giant sequoia seedlings in a new era of high-severity wildfires
Assessing giant sequoia mortality and regeneration following high-severity wildfire Assessing giant sequoia mortality and regeneration following high-severity wildfire
Snag dynamics and surface fuel loads in the Sierra Nevada: Predicting the impact of the 2012–2016 drought Snag dynamics and surface fuel loads in the Sierra Nevada: Predicting the impact of the 2012–2016 drought
Masting is uncommon in trees that depend on mutualist dispersers in the context of global climate and fertility gradients Masting is uncommon in trees that depend on mutualist dispersers in the context of global climate and fertility gradients
poscrptR poscrptR
Seed source, not drought, determines patterns of seed production in Sierra Nevada conifers Seed source, not drought, determines patterns of seed production in Sierra Nevada conifers
Science and Products
Cross-Park RAD Project (CPRP): A Case Study in Four National Parks Investigating How Institutional Context and Emotions Shape Manager Decisions to Resist, Accept, or Direct Change in Transforming Ecosystems
Forest health and drought response
Post-Fire Conifer Regeneration Under a Warming Climate: Will Severe Fire Be a Catalyst for Forest Loss?
Adaptations to Rapid Change
Improving Understanding of Forest and Carbon Dynamics
Detection, Attribution, and Interpretation of Forest Changes
Ellsworth Huntington’s (1914) Giant Sequoia Ages and Tree-Ring Measurements from 458 Stumps in Sequoia National Forest and Mountain Home Grove Ellsworth Huntington’s (1914) Giant Sequoia Ages and Tree-Ring Measurements from 458 Stumps in Sequoia National Forest and Mountain Home Grove
poscrptR poscrptR
Sequoia and Yosemite National Parks Mortality and Fire Data (1990-2019) for Competition-Fire-Drought Interaction Analysis Sequoia and Yosemite National Parks Mortality and Fire Data (1990-2019) for Competition-Fire-Drought Interaction Analysis
Seed source, not drought, determines patterns of seed production in Sierra Nevada conifers Seed source, not drought, determines patterns of seed production in Sierra Nevada conifers
Data for Use in poscrptR Post-fire Conifer Regeneration Prediction Model Data for Use in poscrptR Post-fire Conifer Regeneration Prediction Model
Forest Structure Data for Burned and Unburned Sites at Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks Forest Structure Data for Burned and Unburned Sites at Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks
Every year, the health of each of the thousands of trees in established research plots is checked, and if a tree has died, the cause of death is determined.
Every year, the health of each of the thousands of trees in established research plots is checked, and if a tree has died, the cause of death is determined.
A western white pine (Pinus monticola) in Kings Canyon National Park, Calif., towers over USGS ecologist Nathan Stephenson.
A western white pine (Pinus monticola) in Kings Canyon National Park, Calif., towers over USGS ecologist Nathan Stephenson.
California's hotter drought has already killed millions of trees, particularly in low-elevation forests.
California's hotter drought has already killed millions of trees, particularly in low-elevation forests.
Giant sequoias have fared better than other tree species in California's recent hotter drought, but many have shown unprecedented foliage dieback in response to the drought.
Giant sequoias have fared better than other tree species in California's recent hotter drought, but many have shown unprecedented foliage dieback in response to the drought.