Science Flash April 2021: Climate Change and Forest Adaptation: Building a Strategy for Science-Based Action
Climate change represents one of the most complex and [...]
Science Flash March 2021: Two-Day Seminar to Brings Together Hundreds of Forest Industry Experts
A critical barrier to achieving forest restoration goals in [...]
Science Flash February 2021: New Working Paper: Mitigating Postfire Runoff and Erosion
Catastrophic wildfire events impact communities, ecosystems, and cultural resources—and [...]
Science Flash January 2021: An Assessment of Pinyon-Juniper Woodland Classification on the Kaibab National Forest
Researchers and ecologists at the Ecological Restoration Institute (ERI) [...]
Science Flash December 2020: Using Drones, Airplanes and State-of-the-Art Technology to Assess Forest Health
Researchers at Northern Arizona University and the Ecological Restoration [...]
Science Flash November 2020: White Paper: Local Experiences with the 2019 Museum Fire and Associated Flood Risk
A new white paper by researchers Catrin Edgeley and [...]
Science Flash September 2020: Working Paper: Fires and Soils in Frequent-Fire Landscapes of the Southwest
Soils are the foundation of forest ecosystems. As author [...]
Science Flash August 2020: New White Paper: Western Wildfires are Increasing in Size, Severity and Frequency
As much of the Southwest US grapples with high [...]
Science Flash July 2020: Announcing New Executive Director Dr. Andrew Sánchez Meador
After a national search, the Ecological Restoration Institute (ERI) [...]
Science Flash June 2020: New White Paper: Forest Fires Have Increased in Size, Severity and Frequency Across Western Forests
As we enter another active wildfire season in the [...]
Science Flash May 2020: ERI Awarded Wood Innovations Grant to Expand Wood Products Industry in the Southwest
The US Forest Service’s Wood Innovations Grant program awarded [...]
Science Flash April 2020: Long-Term Efficacy of Managed Wildfires Focus of New ERI Study
To learn more about the effectiveness of managing wildfires [...]