Phillip van Mantgem
Phil van Mantgem is a research ecologist at the Western Ecological Research Center.
RESEARCH INTERESTS
- Conservation biology
- Fire ecology
- Forest ecology
Professional Experience
Research Ecologist, USGS, Redwood Field Station, Arcata, CA, 2008 - Present
Ecologist, USGS, Sequoia and Kings Canyon Field Station, Three Rivers, CA, 2000 - 2008
Education and Certifications
Ph.D., Ecology, University of California, Davis, CA 2001
M.S., Plant Biology, University of California, Davis, CA 1996
B.S., Botany, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA 1991
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 74
Effects of road decommissioning on carbon stocks, losses, and emissions in north coastal California
During the last 3 decades, many road removal projects have been implemented on public and private lands in the United States to reduce erosion and other impacts from abandoned or unmaintained forest roads. Although effective in decreasing sediment production from roads, such activities have a carbon (C) cost as well as representing a carbon savings for an ecosystem. We assessed the...
Authors
Mary Ann Madej, Joseph Seney, Philip J. van Mantgem
Tree mortality patterns following prescribed fire for Pinus and Abies across the southwestern United States
The reintroduction of fire to historically fire-prone forests has been repeatedly shown to reduce understory fuels and promote resistance to high severity fire. However, there is concern that prescribed fire may also have unintended consequences, such as high rates of mortality for large trees and fire-tolerant Pinus species. To test this possibility we evaluated mortality patterns for...
Authors
Philip J. van Mantgem, Jonathan C.B. Nesmith, MaryBeth Keifer, Matthew Brooks
Long-term effects of prescribed fire on mixed conifer forest structure in the Sierra Nevada, California
The capacity of prescribed fire to restore forest conditions is often judged by changes in forest structure within a few years following burning. However, prescribed fire might have longer-term effects on forest structure, potentially changing treatment assessments. We examined annual changes in forest structure in five 1 ha old-growth plots immediately before prescribed fire and up to...
Authors
Phillip van Mantgem, Nathan L. Stephenson, Eric E. Knapp, Jon E. Keeley
Response of western mountain ecosystems to climatic variability and change: A collaborative research approach
No abstract available.
Authors
David L. Peterson, Craig Allen, Jill Baron, Daniel B. Fagre, Donald J. McKenzie, Nathan L. Stephenson, Andrew G. Fountain, Jeffrey A. Hicke, George P. Malanson, Dennis S. Ojima, Christina L. Tague, Phillip van Mantgem
Causes and implications of the correlation between forest productivity and tree mortality rates
At global and regional scales, tree mortality rates are positively correlated with forest net primary productivity (NPP). Yet causes of the correlation are unknown, in spite of potentially profound implications for our understanding of environmental controls of forest structure and dynamics and, more generally, our understanding of broad-scale environmental controls of population...
Authors
Nathan L. Stephenson, Philip J. van Mantgem, Andrew G. Bunn, Howard Bruner, Mark E. Harmon, Kari B. O'Connell, Dean L. Urban, Jerry F. Franklin
The contribution of competition to tree mortality in old-growth coniferous forests
Competition is a well-documented contributor to tree mortality in temperate forests, with numerous studies documenting a relationship between tree death and the competitive environment. Models frequently rely on competition as the only non-random mechanism affecting tree mortality. However, for mature forests, competition may cease to be the primary driver of mortality.We use a large...
Authors
A. Das, John J. Battles, N.L. Stephenson, Phillip van Mantgem
The effects of raking on sugar pine mortality following prescribed fire in Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks, California, USA
Prescribed fire is an important tool for fuel reduction, the control of competing vegetation, and forest restoration. The accumulated fuels associated with historical fire exclusion can cause undesirably high tree mortality rates following prescribed fires and wildfires. This is especially true for sugar pine (Pinus lambertiana Douglas), which is already negatively affected by the...
Authors
Jonathan C.B. Nesmith, Kevin L. O'Hara, Phillip van Mantgem, Perry de Valpine
Negligible influence of spatial autocorrelation in the assessment of fire effects in a mixed conifer forest
Fire is an important feature of many forest ecosystems, although the quantification of its effects is compromised by the large scale at which fire occurs and its inherent unpredictability. A recurring problem is the use of subsamples collected within individual burns, potentially resulting in spatially autocorrelated data. Using subsamples from six different fires (and three unburned...
Authors
P. J. van Mantgem, Dylan W. Schwilk
Widespread increase of tree mortality rates in the Western United States
Persistent changes in tree mortality rates can alter forest structure, composition, and ecosystem services such as carbon sequestration. Our analyses of longitudinal data from unmanaged old forests in the western United States showed that background (noncatastrophic) mortality rates have increased rapidly in recent decades, with doubling periods ranging from 17 to 29 years among regions...
Authors
P. J. van Mantgem, N.L. Stephenson, J.C. Byrne, L.D. Daniels, J.F. Franklin, Peter Z. Fulé, M. E. Harmon, A.J. Larson, Joseph P. Smith, A.H. Taylor, T.T. Veblen
Spatial elements of mortality risk in old-growth forests
For many species of long-lived organisms, such as trees, survival appears to be the most critical vital rate affecting population persistence. However, methods commonly used to quantify tree death, such as relating tree mortality risk solely to diameter growth, almost certainly do not account for important spatial processes. Our goal in this study was to detect and, if present, to...
Authors
Adrian Das, John J. Battles, Phillip van Mantgem, Nathan L. Stephenson
Apparent climatically induced increase of tree mortality rates in a temperate forest
We provide a first detailed analysis of long-term, annual-resolution demographic trends in a temperate forest. After tracking the fates of 21 338 trees in a network of old-growth forest plots in the Sierra Nevada of California, we found that mortality rate, but not the recruitment rate, increased significantly over the 22 years of measurement (1983-2004). Mortality rates increased in...
Authors
P. J. van Mantgem, N.L. Stephenson
The relationship between tree growth patterns and likelihood of mortality: A study of two tree species in the Sierra Nevada
We examined mortality of Abies concolor (Gord. & Glend.) Lindl. (white fir) and Pinus lambertiana Dougl. (sugar pine) by developing logistic models using three growth indices obtained from tree rings: average growth, growth trend, and count of abrupt growth declines. For P. lambertiana, models with average growth, growth trend, and count of abrupt declines improved overall prediction (78...
Authors
A.J. Das, John J. Battles, N.L. Stephenson, P. J. van Mantgem
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 74
Effects of road decommissioning on carbon stocks, losses, and emissions in north coastal California
During the last 3 decades, many road removal projects have been implemented on public and private lands in the United States to reduce erosion and other impacts from abandoned or unmaintained forest roads. Although effective in decreasing sediment production from roads, such activities have a carbon (C) cost as well as representing a carbon savings for an ecosystem. We assessed the...
Authors
Mary Ann Madej, Joseph Seney, Philip J. van Mantgem
Tree mortality patterns following prescribed fire for Pinus and Abies across the southwestern United States
The reintroduction of fire to historically fire-prone forests has been repeatedly shown to reduce understory fuels and promote resistance to high severity fire. However, there is concern that prescribed fire may also have unintended consequences, such as high rates of mortality for large trees and fire-tolerant Pinus species. To test this possibility we evaluated mortality patterns for...
Authors
Philip J. van Mantgem, Jonathan C.B. Nesmith, MaryBeth Keifer, Matthew Brooks
Long-term effects of prescribed fire on mixed conifer forest structure in the Sierra Nevada, California
The capacity of prescribed fire to restore forest conditions is often judged by changes in forest structure within a few years following burning. However, prescribed fire might have longer-term effects on forest structure, potentially changing treatment assessments. We examined annual changes in forest structure in five 1 ha old-growth plots immediately before prescribed fire and up to...
Authors
Phillip van Mantgem, Nathan L. Stephenson, Eric E. Knapp, Jon E. Keeley
Response of western mountain ecosystems to climatic variability and change: A collaborative research approach
No abstract available.
Authors
David L. Peterson, Craig Allen, Jill Baron, Daniel B. Fagre, Donald J. McKenzie, Nathan L. Stephenson, Andrew G. Fountain, Jeffrey A. Hicke, George P. Malanson, Dennis S. Ojima, Christina L. Tague, Phillip van Mantgem
Causes and implications of the correlation between forest productivity and tree mortality rates
At global and regional scales, tree mortality rates are positively correlated with forest net primary productivity (NPP). Yet causes of the correlation are unknown, in spite of potentially profound implications for our understanding of environmental controls of forest structure and dynamics and, more generally, our understanding of broad-scale environmental controls of population...
Authors
Nathan L. Stephenson, Philip J. van Mantgem, Andrew G. Bunn, Howard Bruner, Mark E. Harmon, Kari B. O'Connell, Dean L. Urban, Jerry F. Franklin
The contribution of competition to tree mortality in old-growth coniferous forests
Competition is a well-documented contributor to tree mortality in temperate forests, with numerous studies documenting a relationship between tree death and the competitive environment. Models frequently rely on competition as the only non-random mechanism affecting tree mortality. However, for mature forests, competition may cease to be the primary driver of mortality.We use a large...
Authors
A. Das, John J. Battles, N.L. Stephenson, Phillip van Mantgem
The effects of raking on sugar pine mortality following prescribed fire in Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks, California, USA
Prescribed fire is an important tool for fuel reduction, the control of competing vegetation, and forest restoration. The accumulated fuels associated with historical fire exclusion can cause undesirably high tree mortality rates following prescribed fires and wildfires. This is especially true for sugar pine (Pinus lambertiana Douglas), which is already negatively affected by the...
Authors
Jonathan C.B. Nesmith, Kevin L. O'Hara, Phillip van Mantgem, Perry de Valpine
Negligible influence of spatial autocorrelation in the assessment of fire effects in a mixed conifer forest
Fire is an important feature of many forest ecosystems, although the quantification of its effects is compromised by the large scale at which fire occurs and its inherent unpredictability. A recurring problem is the use of subsamples collected within individual burns, potentially resulting in spatially autocorrelated data. Using subsamples from six different fires (and three unburned...
Authors
P. J. van Mantgem, Dylan W. Schwilk
Widespread increase of tree mortality rates in the Western United States
Persistent changes in tree mortality rates can alter forest structure, composition, and ecosystem services such as carbon sequestration. Our analyses of longitudinal data from unmanaged old forests in the western United States showed that background (noncatastrophic) mortality rates have increased rapidly in recent decades, with doubling periods ranging from 17 to 29 years among regions...
Authors
P. J. van Mantgem, N.L. Stephenson, J.C. Byrne, L.D. Daniels, J.F. Franklin, Peter Z. Fulé, M. E. Harmon, A.J. Larson, Joseph P. Smith, A.H. Taylor, T.T. Veblen
Spatial elements of mortality risk in old-growth forests
For many species of long-lived organisms, such as trees, survival appears to be the most critical vital rate affecting population persistence. However, methods commonly used to quantify tree death, such as relating tree mortality risk solely to diameter growth, almost certainly do not account for important spatial processes. Our goal in this study was to detect and, if present, to...
Authors
Adrian Das, John J. Battles, Phillip van Mantgem, Nathan L. Stephenson
Apparent climatically induced increase of tree mortality rates in a temperate forest
We provide a first detailed analysis of long-term, annual-resolution demographic trends in a temperate forest. After tracking the fates of 21 338 trees in a network of old-growth forest plots in the Sierra Nevada of California, we found that mortality rate, but not the recruitment rate, increased significantly over the 22 years of measurement (1983-2004). Mortality rates increased in...
Authors
P. J. van Mantgem, N.L. Stephenson
The relationship between tree growth patterns and likelihood of mortality: A study of two tree species in the Sierra Nevada
We examined mortality of Abies concolor (Gord. & Glend.) Lindl. (white fir) and Pinus lambertiana Dougl. (sugar pine) by developing logistic models using three growth indices obtained from tree rings: average growth, growth trend, and count of abrupt growth declines. For P. lambertiana, models with average growth, growth trend, and count of abrupt declines improved overall prediction (78...
Authors
A.J. Das, John J. Battles, N.L. Stephenson, P. J. van Mantgem