After the Wildfire

Ten Years of Recovery from the Willow Fire

Nonfiction, Science & Nature, Nature, Environment, Ecology
Cover of the book After the Wildfire by John Alcock, University of Arizona Press
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: John Alcock ISBN: 9780816536153
Publisher: University of Arizona Press Publication: February 28, 2017
Imprint: University of Arizona Press Language: English
Author: John Alcock
ISBN: 9780816536153
Publisher: University of Arizona Press
Publication: February 28, 2017
Imprint: University of Arizona Press
Language: English

Swallowtail butterflies frolic on the wind. Vireos and rock wrens sing their hearts out by the recovering creek. Spiders and other predators chase their next meal. Through it all, John Alcock observes, records, and delights in what he sees. In a once-burnt area, life resurges. Plants whose seeds and roots withstood an intense fire become habitat for the returning creatures of the wild. After the Wildfire describes the remarkable recovery of wildlife in the Mazatzal Mountains in central Arizona.

It is the rare observer who has the dedication to revisit the site of a wildfire, especially over many years and seasons. But naturalist John Alcock returned again and again to the Mazatzals, where the disastrous Willow fire of 2004 burned 187 square miles. Documenting the fire’s aftermath over a decade, Alcock thrills at the renewal of the once-blackened region. Walking the South Fork of Deer Creek in all seasons as the years passed, he was rewarded by the sight of exuberant plant life that in turn fostered an equally satisfying return of animals ranging from small insects to large mammals.

Alcock clearly explains the response of chaparral plants to fire and the creatures that reinhabit these plants as they come back from a ferocious blaze: the great spreadwing damselfly, the western meadowlark, the elk, and birds and bugs of rich and colorful varieties. This book is at once a journey of biological discovery and a celebration of the ability of living things to reoccupy a devastated location. Alcock encourages others to engage the natural world—even one that has burnt to the ground.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Swallowtail butterflies frolic on the wind. Vireos and rock wrens sing their hearts out by the recovering creek. Spiders and other predators chase their next meal. Through it all, John Alcock observes, records, and delights in what he sees. In a once-burnt area, life resurges. Plants whose seeds and roots withstood an intense fire become habitat for the returning creatures of the wild. After the Wildfire describes the remarkable recovery of wildlife in the Mazatzal Mountains in central Arizona.

It is the rare observer who has the dedication to revisit the site of a wildfire, especially over many years and seasons. But naturalist John Alcock returned again and again to the Mazatzals, where the disastrous Willow fire of 2004 burned 187 square miles. Documenting the fire’s aftermath over a decade, Alcock thrills at the renewal of the once-blackened region. Walking the South Fork of Deer Creek in all seasons as the years passed, he was rewarded by the sight of exuberant plant life that in turn fostered an equally satisfying return of animals ranging from small insects to large mammals.

Alcock clearly explains the response of chaparral plants to fire and the creatures that reinhabit these plants as they come back from a ferocious blaze: the great spreadwing damselfly, the western meadowlark, the elk, and birds and bugs of rich and colorful varieties. This book is at once a journey of biological discovery and a celebration of the ability of living things to reoccupy a devastated location. Alcock encourages others to engage the natural world—even one that has burnt to the ground.

More books from University of Arizona Press

Cover of the book Seeds of Resistance, Seeds of Hope by John Alcock
Cover of the book Divided Waters by John Alcock
Cover of the book Chaco Revisited by John Alcock
Cover of the book Chasing Arizona by John Alcock
Cover of the book Grasshopper Pueblo by John Alcock
Cover of the book Beyond Alterity by John Alcock
Cover of the book Looking Like the Enemy by John Alcock
Cover of the book Unsettling Mobility by John Alcock
Cover of the book In the Shadow of Cortés by John Alcock
Cover of the book Human Spaceflight by John Alcock
Cover of the book Native Apparitions by John Alcock
Cover of the book Crime and Social Justice in Indian Country by John Alcock
Cover of the book The Ecological Other by John Alcock
Cover of the book Rubbish! by John Alcock
Cover of the book Fluid Arguments by John Alcock
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy