Picture taken February, 2006, Beaver Dam mountains, UT. Postfire landscape taken after a summer 2005 fire in what was previously blackbrush scrub.
Matthew Brooks
Dr. Matthew Brooks is an Ecologist with the U.S. Geological Survey's Western Ecological Research Center.
His primary research emphasis is on the ecology and management of alien plants and fire in the deserts and mountains of western North America. Other research topics include drought, wildlife ecology, ecological restoration, and the ecological effects of various land-use regimes. Dr. Brooks serves on the editorial boards of the journals Fire Ecology and Rangeland Ecology and Management, and was a charter editorial board member of Invasive Plant Science and Management. Dr. Brooks has taught at the high school, community college, and university levels and has advised numerous Master's and Doctoral students.
RESEARCH INTERESTS
Education and Certifications
Ph.D., Biology, concentration in Ecology and Population Biology, University of California, Riverside, CA 1998
M.A., Biology, California State University, Fresno, CA 1992
Teaching Credential, Biology/Physical Sciences, California State University, Fresno, CA 1990
B.S., Biological Sciences, University of California, Irvine, CA 1987
Science and Products
WERC Fire Science
Wildland Fire Science in Forests and Deserts
Yosemite Field Station
Fighting Drought with Fire: A Comparison of Burned and Unburned Forests in Drought-Impacted Areas of the Southwest
Evidence for shifts in plant species diversity along N deposition gradients: a first synthesis for the United States
How will Mammals in the Alpine Zone of the Sierra Nevada Mountains Respond to Future Climate?
Fire Regimes in the Mojave Desert (1972-2010)
Invasive Plant Cover in the Mojave Desert, 2009 - 2013 (ver. 2.0, April 2021)
Riparian vegetation, topography, sediment quality and river corridor geomorphology in the Lower Virgin River 2010-2017
Subalpine Meadow Plant Communities in Yosemite and Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks, 2011-2012
Fire Patterns among Ecological Zones in the California Desert, 1984-2013
Fire Patterns in the Range of the Greater Sage-Grouse, 1984-2013-Implications for Conservation and Management
Picture taken February, 2006, Beaver Dam mountains, UT. Postfire landscape taken after a summer 2005 fire in what was previously blackbrush scrub.
Homogenization of soil seed bank communities by fire and invasive species in the Mojave Desert
Editorial: Fire regimes in desert ecosystems: Drivers, impacts and changes
U.S. Geological Survey wildland fire science strategic plan, 2021–26
Contrasting geographic patterns of ignition probability and burn severity in the Mojave Desert
Combined effects of biological control of an invasive shrub and fluvial processes on riparian vegetation dynamics
Effects of invasive plants on fire regimes and postfire vegetation diversity in an arid ecosystem
Potential vulnerability of 348 herbaceous species to atmospheric deposition of nitrogen and sulfur in the United States
Operationalizing resilience and resistance concepts to address invasive grass-fire cycles
Southeastern Deserts Bioregion
Fire and invasive plants
Alternative pathways to landscape transformation: Invasive grasses, burn severity and fire frequency in arid ecosystems
Climate change and tree-line ecosystems in the Sierra Nevada: Habitat suitability modelling to inform high-elevation forest dynamics monitoring
Science and Products
WERC Fire Science
Wildland Fire Science in Forests and Deserts
Yosemite Field Station
Fighting Drought with Fire: A Comparison of Burned and Unburned Forests in Drought-Impacted Areas of the Southwest
Evidence for shifts in plant species diversity along N deposition gradients: a first synthesis for the United States
How will Mammals in the Alpine Zone of the Sierra Nevada Mountains Respond to Future Climate?
Fire Regimes in the Mojave Desert (1972-2010)
Invasive Plant Cover in the Mojave Desert, 2009 - 2013 (ver. 2.0, April 2021)
Riparian vegetation, topography, sediment quality and river corridor geomorphology in the Lower Virgin River 2010-2017
Subalpine Meadow Plant Communities in Yosemite and Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks, 2011-2012
Fire Patterns among Ecological Zones in the California Desert, 1984-2013
Fire Patterns in the Range of the Greater Sage-Grouse, 1984-2013-Implications for Conservation and Management
Picture taken February, 2006, Beaver Dam mountains, UT. Postfire landscape taken after a summer 2005 fire in what was previously blackbrush scrub.
Picture taken February, 2006, Beaver Dam mountains, UT. Postfire landscape taken after a summer 2005 fire in what was previously blackbrush scrub.