The evaluation of meta-analysis techniques for quantifying prescribed fire effects on fuel loadings

TitleThe evaluation of meta-analysis techniques for quantifying prescribed fire effects on fuel loadings
Publication TypeReport
Year of Publication2009
AuthorsKopper, KE, McKenzie, D, Peterson, DL
Series TitleResearch Paper
Document NumberPNW-RP-582
Pagination24
Date Published06/2009
InstitutionUS Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station
CityPortland, OR
Keywordseffect size, fuels and fuel treatments, hedges’ d, log-response ratio, mixed-effects model, prescribed burning
Abstract

Models and effect-size metrics for meta-analysis were compared in four separate meta-analyses quantifying surface fuels after prescribed fires in ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa Dougl. ex Laws.) forests of the Western United States. An aggregated data set was compiled from 8 published reports that contained data from 65 fire treatment units. Downed woody and organic fuels were partitioned into five classes, and four meta-analyses were performed on each in a 2 by 2 factorial combination of fixed-effects vs. mixed-effects models with a difference-based metric (Hedges’ d) vs. a ratio-based metric (log-response ratio). All analyses yielded significant effect sizes for each class of fuels, although mixed-effects models had larger confidence intervals around mean effect sizes and smaller ranges in those means. The use of multiple methods produced a robust result for this study, but also carries the danger of selective interpretation if results are contradictory. Meta-analysis in fire research merits further consideration because it facilitates inferences across data sets reported by multiple authors, even when reporting is inconsistent. Nevertheless, standardized methodology, consistent measurement protocols, and complete reporting of both significant and nonsignificant results will greatly assist future synthesis efforts using meta-analysis.

URLhttp://www.fs.fed.us/pnw/pubs/pnw_rp582.pdf