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  1. Scott Stephens, a professor of environmental science, policy and management at Berkeley and co-director of Berkeley Forests, joins SHORT WAVE, the daily science podcast from NPR with an urgent message: They've been here 1,500 years, and each tree maybe survived 60, 70, 80 fires. That's incredible.

  2. View the profiles of people named Scott Stephens. Join Facebook to connect with Scott Stephens and others you may know. Facebook gives people the power...

  3. Articles 1–20. ‪Professor of Fire Science, UC Berkeley‬ - ‪‪Cited by 24,185‬‬ - ‪Fire Science‬ - ‪Fire Ecology‬ - ‪forest restoration‬ - ‪forest policy‬ - ‪disturbance ecology‬.

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  5. Dec 12, 2023 · According to UC Berkeley fire scientist Scott Stephens, the goal of restoration thinning is to remove excess vegetation while preserving large, healthy trees. Scott Stephens/UC Berkeley Blodgett’s compartment 350 in 2019, after receiving two separate restoration thinning treatments over 20 years.

  6. Professor. I am interested in the interactions of wildland fire and ecosystems. This includes how prehistoric fires once interacted with ecosystems, how current wildland fires are affecting ecosystems, and how future fires and management may change this interaction.

  7. Dr. Scott Stephens. Professor. sstephens@berkeley.edu, google scholar page. Hometown: Napa, CA. Ph.D. Wildland Resource Science, University of California Berkeley. Publications via Google Scholar. Current Projects. Illilouette Creek basin research.

  8. Jul 8, 2022 · A professor of fire science and ecology and co-director of Berkeley Forests, Stephens will help draft a report to Congress recommending federal policies and strategies to more effectively prevent, mitigate, suppress, and manage wildland fires.

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