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Mitchell J. Power

· ProfessorVerified

University of Utah · Environment, Society & Sustainability

Active 1995–2026

h-index35
Citations8.1k
Papers15943 last 5y
Funding
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Research topics

  • Ecology
  • Geography
  • Geology
  • Physical geography
  • Geomorphology
  • Oceanography
  • Archaeology
  • Paleontology
  • Geochemistry

Selected publications

  • The PteridoPortal: A publicly accessible collection of over three million records of extant and extinct pteridophytes

    UNC Libraries · 2026-03-10

    articleOpen access

    Premise: Pteridophytes—vascular land plants that disperse by spores—are a powerful system for studying plant evolution, particularly with respect to the impact of abiotic factors on evolutionary trajectories through deep time. However, our ability to use pteridophytes to investigate such questions—or to capitalize on the ecological and conservation‐related applications of the group—has been impaired by the relative isolation of the neo‐ and paleobotanical research communities and by the absence of large‐scale biodiversity data sources. Methods: Here we present the Pteridophyte Collections Consortium (PCC), an interdisciplinary community uniting neo‐ and paleobotanists, and the associated PteridoPortal, a publicly accessible online portal that serves over three million pteridophyte records, including herbarium specimens, paleontological museum specimens, and iNaturalist observations. We demonstrate the utility of the PteridoPortal through discussion of three example PteridoPortal‐enabled research projects. Results: The data within the PteridoPortal are global in scope and are queryable in a flexible manner. The PteridoPortal contains a taxonomic thesaurus (a digital version of a Linnaean classification) that includes both extant and extinct pteridophytes in a common phylogenetic framework. The PteridoPortal allows applications such as greatly accelerated classic floristics, entirely new “next‐generation” floristic approaches, and the study of environmentally mediated evolution of functional morphology across deep time. Discussion: The PCC and PteridoPortal provide a comprehensive resource enabling novel research into plant evolution, ecology, and conservation across deep time, facilitating rapid floristic analyses and other biodiversity‐related investigations, and providing new opportunities for education and community engagement.

  • Multi-millennial reconstruction of fire return intervals from a fynbos – Afrotemperate forest ecotone in the Cape Floristic Region, South Africa: Paleoecological implications for present-day management

    Global and Planetary Change · 2026-01-13

    article
  • Millennial-scale fire and climate dynamics in the world's largest tropical wetland show emerging fire threat to flooded ecosystems

    Global and Planetary Change · 2026-01-18

    articleOpen access

    The Pantanal, the world's largest tropical wetland and a globally significant centre of biodiversity, has been increasingly threatened by fire. The extreme fire season of 2019–20, which caused enormous environmental damage, was linked to drought. However, predicting the future of fire in this region is challenging because of complex interactions among topography, seasonal flooding, and diverse vegetation. Here, we investigate climate-driven changes to fire regimes across five distinctive vegetation types by integrating millennial-scale histories of fire and climate with high-resolution monitoring and remote sensing data from the last two decades. We show that the impacts of climate change on fire activity varies depending on vegetation. In savannahs, fire occurrence is highly correlated to biomass availability, while seasonally dry tropical forest burns only under extreme drought conditions. The seasonally flooded vegetation mosaic is observed to be highly flammable under low rainfall and protracted dry seasons. This study highlights that new fire threats to low-lying flooded vegetation are emerging as human impact and climate change reshape fire regimes in the Pantanal. • Pantanal fire is driven by complex interactions of vegetation and flooding. • Historical datasets show variations in flooding and rainfall over 3500 years. • Spatial analysis of fire over 20 years shows burning in flooded ecosystems. • Palaeodata show climate-driven burning in ecosystems classified as fire-sensitive.

  • Millennial-Scale Fire and Climate Dynamics in the World's Largest Tropical Wetland Show Emerging Fire Threat to Flooded Ecosystems

    SSRN Electronic Journal · 2025-01-01

    preprintOpen access
  • Evaluating climatic and anthropogenic drivers of fire activity over four millennia at Eilandvlei, southern Cape coast, South Africa

    Quaternary Science Reviews · 2025-07-15 · 2 citations

    article
  • The PteridoPortal: A publicly accessible collection of over three million records of extant and extinct pteridophytes

    Open MIND · 2025-01-01

    article

    Premise: Pteridophytes—vascular land plants that disperse by spores—are a powerful system for studying plant evolution, particularly with respect to the impact of abiotic factors on evolutionary trajectories through deep time. However, our ability to use pteridophytes to investigate such questions—or to capitalize on the ecological and conservation‐related applications of the group—has been impaired by the relative isolation of the neo‐ and paleobotanical research communities and by the absence of large‐scale biodiversity data sources. Methods: Here we present the Pteridophyte Collections Consortium (PCC), an interdisciplinary community uniting neo‐ and paleobotanists, and the associated PteridoPortal, a publicly accessible online portal that serves over three million pteridophyte records, including herbarium specimens, paleontological museum specimens, and iNaturalist observations. We demonstrate the utility of the PteridoPortal through discussion of three example PteridoPortal‐enabled research projects. Results: The data within the PteridoPortal are global in scope and are queryable in a flexible manner. The PteridoPortal contains a taxonomic thesaurus (a digital version of a Linnaean classification) that includes both extant and extinct pteridophytes in a common phylogenetic framework. The PteridoPortal allows applications such as greatly accelerated classic floristics, entirely new “next‐generation” floristic approaches, and the study of environmentally mediated evolution of functional morphology across deep time. Discussion: The PCC and PteridoPortal provide a comprehensive resource enabling novel research into plant evolution, ecology, and conservation across deep time, facilitating rapid floristic analyses and other biodiversity‐related investigations, and providing new opportunities for education and community engagement.

  • The PteridoPortal: A publicly accessible collection of over three million records of extant and extinct pteridophytes

    Applications in Plant Sciences · 2025-03-01 · 6 citations

    articleOpen access

    Premise: Pteridophytes-vascular land plants that disperse by spores-are a powerful system for studying plant evolution, particularly with respect to the impact of abiotic factors on evolutionary trajectories through deep time. However, our ability to use pteridophytes to investigate such questions-or to capitalize on the ecological and conservation-related applications of the group-has been impaired by the relative isolation of the neo- and paleobotanical research communities and by the absence of large-scale biodiversity data sources. Methods: Here we present the Pteridophyte Collections Consortium (PCC), an interdisciplinary community uniting neo- and paleobotanists, and the associated PteridoPortal, a publicly accessible online portal that serves over three million pteridophyte records, including herbarium specimens, paleontological museum specimens, and iNaturalist observations. We demonstrate the utility of the PteridoPortal through discussion of three example PteridoPortal-enabled research projects. Results: The data within the PteridoPortal are global in scope and are queryable in a flexible manner. The PteridoPortal contains a taxonomic thesaurus (a digital version of a Linnaean classification) that includes both extant and extinct pteridophytes in a common phylogenetic framework. The PteridoPortal allows applications such as greatly accelerated classic floristics, entirely new "next-generation" floristic approaches, and the study of environmentally mediated evolution of functional morphology across deep time. Discussion: The PCC and PteridoPortal provide a comprehensive resource enabling novel research into plant evolution, ecology, and conservation across deep time, facilitating rapid floristic analyses and other biodiversity-related investigations, and providing new opportunities for education and community engagement.

  • Examining the effects of climate change and human impacts on a high-resolution, late Holocene paleofire record from South Africa's winter rainfall zone

    Quaternary Science Advances · 2024-05-04 · 4 citations

    articleOpen access

    Fire is central to the Cape Floristic Region’s highly biodiverse and disturbance-adapted Fynbos Biome. However, prehistoric fire regimes, their ecological consequences, and their relationships with large-scale climate drivers and human activities remain poorly understood. Here, we use a high-resolution sedimentary charcoal record from Verlorenvlei, a coastal lake situated on the west coast, to interrogate links between fire, climate, and pastoralism in the Fynbos Biome. Our record has a robust chronology supported by 24 radiocarbon dates and provides a continuous sedimentary sequence spanning the last 4200 years, documenting fire activity before and after the local arrival of pastoralists in the Verlorenvlei area ∼1500 cal years BP. Fire at Verlorenvlei over the last 4200 years is variable, with relatively low activity until ∼2000 cal years BP, after which variable but generally higher fire activity occurs until the highest period of fire activity from ∼1450 – 1800 CE (∼500 – 150 cal years BP). The increase in fire activity ∼2000 years ago corresponds with a shift in the diatom assemblage at Verlorenvlei from marine towards brackish and freshwater species, reflecting increased precipitation derived from a strengthening of the southern westerly winds. The peak in fire activity beginning ∼1450 CE (∼500 cal years BP), near the onset of the Little Ice Age, tracks a second diatom-inferred strengthening of the westerly winds. Other southern hemisphere and Antarctic records further corroborate this increased westerly influence after ∼2000 years. Linear regression modeling on the fire record indicates that moisture availability is the primary driver of fire at Verlorenvlei, with little evidence that human populations influenced fire. Our reconstruction suggests that fire activity at Verlorenvlei is limited by moisture availability and that wetter conditions facilitate increased vegetation (i.e., fuel) and intensified fire at this otherwise fuel-limited site. This work has implications for management and conservation decisions in response to future predictions of a warmer and drier climate along South Africa’s west coast.

  • CAVE SEDIMENT CORE PRESERVES 2200 YEARS OF ALPINE WILDFIRE HISTORY IN NORTHERN UTAH, USA

    Abstracts with programs - Geological Society of America · 2024-01-01

    article
  • Waking the “sleeping giant?” Mid- to Late-Holocene environment and fire history in the Aitape area, northern Papua New Guinea

    The Holocene · 2024-09-06 · 2 citations

    article

    The coastlines of the southwestern Pacific are dynamic environments that have been repeatedly reshaped by tectonic forces as well as changing global climate and sea level. It has been theorized that much of the north coast of New Guinea was sparsely inhabited until stabilization of coastal flats fallowing the Mid-Holocene Thermal Maximum and resulting marine high stand. We report on environmental proxy indicators measured in core samples taken near modern day Aitape, Papua New Guinea. These cores record the formation of a large lagoonal system on the modern coastal flats by 5800 cal BP. This lagoon infilled over the next several 1000 years as sea level dropped, with the modern coastal flats stabilizing by 1400 cal BP. A charcoal record spanning the period between 6200 and 1400 cal BP documents substantial increases in influx between ~6200 and 6000 cal BP and particularly from ~3000 to 2600 cal BP. Comparison to regional charcoal and ENSO records suggests that increasing aridity and ENSO intensity may drive regional patterning in fire records, however, localized charcoal records are also heavily influenced by human activity. Between 3000 and 2600 cal BP, forest management practices in the Aitape area, currently focused on tree crops and horticulture characterized by long fallowing and limited burning, shifted to a regime characterized by large scale forest clearance and shorter fallowing. We hypothesize that increasing population driven by abundant Mid-Holocene lagoonal resources may have been difficult to maintain as lagoons infilled and climate became more variable, leading to horticultural intensification.

Frequent coauthors

  • Boris Vannière

    Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique

    38 shared
  • J. Tyler Faith

    University of Utah

    30 shared
  • Patrick J. Bartlein

    29 shared
  • Jennifer R. Marlon

    Yale University

    29 shared
  • Anne‐Laure Daniau

    Université de Bordeaux

    29 shared
  • S. Yoshi Maezumi

    Max Planck Institute of Geoanthropology

    24 shared
  • Andrea Brunelle

    22 shared
  • Danièle Colombaroli

    Royal Holloway University of London

    17 shared
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