Compilation of Studies Assessing Post Wildfire Seeding of Rangelands Worldwide, 1965-2010

Mitigation of ecological damage caused by rangeland wildfires has historically been an issue restricted to the western United States. It has focused on conservation of ecosystem function through reducing soil erosion and spread of invasive plants. Effectiveness of mitigation treatments has been debated recently. We searched for literature on postfire seeding of rangelands worldwide. Literature databases searched included SCOPUS, Dissertation Abstracts, Forest Science, Tree search, Web of Science, Google Scholar, and science.gov. Search terms within publications included fire or wildfire in combination with seeding, rehabilitation, restoration, revegetation, stabilization, chaining, disking, drilling, invasives, weeds, cheatgrass, medusahead, sagebrush, rangeland, or grassland. The initial pool of potentially relevant articles numbered 1,519. Abstracts of all papers were reviewed. This pool included many papers not directly relevant to our review, including different ecosystems and different issues associated with wildfire (e.g. air pollution or property damage). On the basis of titles and abstracts, 126 potentially relevant papers were reviewed by at least two investigators. Upon further evaluation, some papers either did not pertain to our focal ecosystems or did not address aspects of soil erosion or invasive species. Effectiveness of postfire seedings was examined in 8 erosion and 19 invasive species cases. This data set provides these citations and the evaluations of the two observers.

Data and Resources

Field Value
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identifier USGS:5851986de4b0f99207c4f192
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modified 20200819
old-spatial {"type": "Polygon", "coordinates": [[[-180, -90], [-180, 90], [ 180, 90], [ 180, -90], [-180, -90]]]}
publisher U.S. Geological Survey
publisher_hierarchy Department of the Interior > U.S. Geological Survey
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theme {geospatial}
Groups
  • AmeriGEOSS
  • National Provider
  • North America
Tags
  • amerigeo
  • amerigeoss
  • chaining
  • cheatgrass
  • ckan
  • disking
  • drilling
  • fire
  • geo
  • geoss
  • grassland
  • invasives
  • literature-review
  • medusahead
  • meta-analysis
  • national
  • non-native
  • north-america
  • rangeland
  • rehabilitation
  • restoration
  • revegetation
  • sagebrush
  • seeding
  • soil-erosion
  • stabilization
  • united-states
  • usgs-5851986de4b0f99207c4f192
  • weeds
  • wildfire
isopen False
license_id notspecified
license_title License not specified
maintainer FRESC Metadata Coordinator
maintainer_email fresc_outreach@usgs.gov
metadata_created 2025-11-20T18:02:42.391520
metadata_modified 2025-11-20T18:02:42.391524
notes Mitigation of ecological damage caused by rangeland wildfires has historically been an issue restricted to the western United States. It has focused on conservation of ecosystem function through reducing soil erosion and spread of invasive plants. Effectiveness of mitigation treatments has been debated recently. We searched for literature on postfire seeding of rangelands worldwide. Literature databases searched included SCOPUS, Dissertation Abstracts, Forest Science, Tree search, Web of Science, Google Scholar, and science.gov. Search terms within publications included fire or wildfire in combination with seeding, rehabilitation, restoration, revegetation, stabilization, chaining, disking, drilling, invasives, weeds, cheatgrass, medusahead, sagebrush, rangeland, or grassland. The initial pool of potentially relevant articles numbered 1,519. Abstracts of all papers were reviewed. This pool included many papers not directly relevant to our review, including different ecosystems and different issues associated with wildfire (e.g. air pollution or property damage). On the basis of titles and abstracts, 126 potentially relevant papers were reviewed by at least two investigators. Upon further evaluation, some papers either did not pertain to our focal ecosystems or did not address aspects of soil erosion or invasive species. Effectiveness of postfire seedings was examined in 8 erosion and 19 invasive species cases. This data set provides these citations and the evaluations of the two observers.
num_resources 2
num_tags 30
title Compilation of Studies Assessing Post Wildfire Seeding of Rangelands Worldwide, 1965-2010