Greg Aplet, Ph.D.
Director of Ecology
Central Rockies Regional Office
Office: 303-650-5818 x 104 Email
Greg Aplet joined the staff of The Wilderness Society’s Ecology and Economics Research Department as forest ecologist in December 1991.
He has been part of the Society’s reviews of federal land management planning initiatives throughout the country, including conservation plans for the northern spotted owl, the Sierra Nevada Ecosystem Project, and the National Fire Plan.
Most of Greg’s work has focused on ecosystem management and the conservation of biological diversity and forest ecosystem health, including co-editing Defining Sustainable Forestry (Island Press 1993) and co-authoring (with Jerry Franklin) "Wilderness Ecosystems" in the 3rd edition of Wilderness Management (Fulcrum Press 2002) and an article on charcoal and soil carbon storage (with Tom DeLuca) in the journal Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment (February 2008).
Greg's background includes a B.S. in Forestry, an M.S. in Wildland Resource Science from the University of California, Berkeley and a Ph.D. in Forest Ecology from Colorado State University. His research includes studies of the dynamics of Rocky Mountain and Hawaiian forests, the ecology of biological invasions, and wilderness and wildland fire management.
Recent Publications
- DeLuca, T.H. and G.H. Aplet. 2008. Charcoal and carbon storage in forest soils of the Rocky Mountain West. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 6:18-24.
- Cole, D.N., Yung, L., Zavaleta, E.S., Aplet, G.H., Chapin III, F.S., Graber, D.M., Higgs, E.S., Hobbs, R.J., Landres, P.B., Millar, C.I., Parsons, D.J., Randall, J.M., Stephenson, N.L., Tonnessen, K.A., White, P.S., and S. Woodley. 2008. Naturalness and beyond: protected area stewardship in an era of global environmental change. George Wright Forum 25(1):37-56.
- Aplet, G.H. and B. Wilmer. The Potential for Restoring Fire-adapted Ecosystems: Exploring Opportunities for Expanded Wildland Fire Use.
- Weller, C., J. Thomson, P. Morton, and G. Aplet. 2002. Fragmenting Our Lands: The Ecological Footprint from Oil and Gas Development. Ecological Analysis. Washington, DC, The Wilderness Society.
- The Unknown Trajectory of Forest Restoration: A Call for Ecosystem Monitoring
- Managing the Landscape for Fire: A Three-Zone, Landscape-Scale Fire Management Strategy
- Targeting the Community Fire Planning Zone: Mapping Matters
- Restoration of Low Elevation Dry Forests of the Northern Rocky Mountains: A Holistic Approach
Recently Published on Wilderness.org:
Managing the Landscape for Fire: A Three-Zone, Landscape-Scale Fire Management Strategy
Charcoal and Carbon Storage in Forest Soils of the Rocky Mountain West
Effects of Timber Harvest Following Wildfire in Western North America
Ecological Foundations of Fire Management in North American Forests and Shrubland Ecosystems
Understanding the mountain pine beetle: Seven facts you need to know
The Evolution of Wilderness Fire Policy
The Wildland Fire Challenge: Protecting the Communities and Restoring Ecosystems
Wildland Fire Use and Cost Containment: A Colorado Case Study
What’s changed in national fire policy and why it matters
The Wildland Fire Challenge: Focus on Reliable Data, Community Protection, and Ecological Restoration
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Spencer R. Phillips, Ph.D.
Spencer Phillips is a natural resource economist who has been with The Wilderness Society's scientific team since 1992. His economic work has focused on helping people, communities and institutions realize the benefits of wildland conservation.
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