AUTHOR=Hessburg Paul F. , Miller Carol L. , Parks Sean A. , Povak Nicholas A. , Taylor Alan H. , Higuera Philip E. , Prichard Susan J. , North Malcolm P. , Collins Brandon M. , Hurteau Matthew D. , Larson Andrew J. , Allen Craig D. , Stephens Scott L. , Rivera-Huerta Hiram , Stevens-Rumann Camille S. , Daniels Lori D. , Gedalof Ze'ev , Gray Robert W. , Kane Van R. , Churchill Derek J. , Hagmann R. Keala , Spies Thomas A. , Cansler C. Alina , Belote R. Travis , Veblen Thomas T. , Battaglia Mike A. , Hoffman Chad , Skinner Carl N. , Safford Hugh D. , Salter R. Brion TITLE=Climate, Environment, and Disturbance History Govern Resilience of Western North American Forests JOURNAL=Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution VOLUME=Volume 7 - 2019 YEAR=2019 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/ecology-and-evolution/articles/10.3389/fevo.2019.00239 DOI=10.3389/fevo.2019.00239 ISSN=2296-701X ABSTRACT=Resilience and resistance concepts have broad application to ecology and society. Resilience is an emergent property that reflects the amount of disruption a system can withstand before its structure or organization uncharacteristically shift. Resistance is a component of resilience. Before the advent of intensive forest management and fire suppression, western North American forests exhibited a naturally occurring resilience to wildfires and other disturbances. Using evidence from ten ecoregions, spanning forests from Canada to Mexico, we review the properties of these forests that reinforced those qualities. We show examples of multi-level landscape resilience, of feedbacks within and among levels, and how conditions have changed under climatic and management influences. We highlight geographic similarities and differences in the structure and organization of historical landscapes, their forest types, and in the conditions that have changed resilience and resistance to abrupt or large-scale disruptions. We discuss the regional climates’ role in episodically or abruptly reorganizing plant and animal biogeography, and forest resilience and resistance to disturbances. We give clear examples of these changes and suggest that managing for resilient forests is a construct that is strongly dependent on scale and social values. It involves human community adaptations that work with the ecosystems they depend on and the processes that shape them. It entails actively managing factors and exploiting mechanisms that drive dynamics at each level as means of adapting landscapes, species, and human communities to climate change, and maintaining core ecosystem functions, processes, and services. Finally, it compels us to prioritize management that incorporates ongoing disturbances and anticipated effects of climatic changes, to support dynamically shifting patchworks of forest and nonforest. Doing so will make these shifting forest conditions and wildfire regimes more gradual and less disruptive to individuals and society.