69 resources found

Tags: Prescribed fire

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  • Guidance Document

    Regeneration, Development, and Density Management in Aspen Stands

    This document delves into the critical aspects of aspen silviculture, addressing the increasing complexity of managing aspen forests due to greater utilization and evolving approaches to mixedwood management. The authors review the mechanisms of aspe...
    This document delves into the critical aspects of aspen silviculture, addressing the increasing complexity of managing aspen forests due to greater utilization and evolving approaches to mixedwood management. The authors review the mechanisms of aspen regeneration, both through root suckering and seeds, and offer preliminary guidelines for managing the density of aspen stands in their early development. The paper aims to synthesize existing knowledge and identify knowledge gaps to better inform management decisions aimed at achieving various forest composition objectives.
  • Extension Note

    Successional Responses to Natural Disturbance, Forest Management, and Climate Change in British Columbia Forests

    This extension note outlines the successional pathways of various forest ecosystems in British Columbia and how these natural trajectories are influenced by natural disturbances, forest management practices, and projected climate change. The document...
    This extension note outlines the successional pathways of various forest ecosystems in British Columbia and how these natural trajectories are influenced by natural disturbances, forest management practices, and projected climate change. The document describes typical post-disturbance development, the impacts of human interventions like harvesting, and potential future shifts due to altered temperature and precipitation regimes. The primary aim is to provide natural resource managers with a concise overview to inform strategies for building resistant and resilient forests in the face of ongoing environmental change.
  • Extension Note

    Forest Management Options for Interior Dry Forest Ecosystems - the Opax Mt. and Isobel Research Trials

    This extension note outlines long-term research at the Opax Mountain and Isobel sites in British Columbia, focusing on sustainable management for Interior Douglas-fir ecosystems. By evaluating various harvesting intensities and patterns, researchers ...
    This extension note outlines long-term research at the Opax Mountain and Isobel sites in British Columbia, focusing on sustainable management for Interior Douglas-fir ecosystems. By evaluating various harvesting intensities and patterns, researchers are investigating how different silvicultural methods impact timber yields, biodiversity, and forage productivity. The studies emphasize that a diverse mosaic of treatments is necessary to satisfy competing ecological and social values, as uniform practices fail to support all forest functions. This document provides forest managers with technical guidance and modeling tools to maintain healthy, open-canopy forests while balancing the needs of the timber industry and the environment.
  • Case Study

    Assessment of Silvicultural Practices in the Engelmann Spruce Subalpine Fir Zone in the Kamloops Forest Region

    This document evaluates the long-term effectiveness of various silviculture practices and forest management techniques across the Engelmann Spruce-Subalpine Fir zones of British Columbia. By assessing historical research trials and logged areas in t...
    This document evaluates the long-term effectiveness of various silviculture practices and forest management techniques across the Engelmann Spruce-Subalpine Fir zones of British Columbia. By assessing historical research trials and logged areas in the southern interior, the document details why certain methods lead to regeneration success or failure, specifically noting the challenges of competing vegetation and harsh environmental conditions. The document is structured to provide a comprehensive analysis of site preparation methods, planting outcomes, and the quality of remaining trees, ultimately revealing that initial spruce growth is often slow and survival rates are frequently unsatisfactory. This document concludes with strategic recommendations for future study to better understand how elevation and plant competition influence the sustainable recovery of these high-altitude ecosystems.
  • Technical Report

    Assessing Post-Fire Douglas-fir Mortality and Douglas-fir Beetle Attacks in the Northern Rocky Mountains

    This report presents models to predict the likelihood of Douglas-fir mortality and bark beetle infestation following wildfires. The authors developed these tools using data from past fires in Montana and Wyoming, aiming to improve both pre-fire plann...
    This report presents models to predict the likelihood of Douglas-fir mortality and bark beetle infestation following wildfires. The authors developed these tools using data from past fires in Montana and Wyoming, aiming to improve both pre-fire planning and post-fire management decisions. The report details the significant variables influencing tree survival and beetle attacks, such as crown scorch and cambium damage, and includes a supplementary field guide with visual aids and methods for field data collection, providing a practical resource for forest managers.
  • Decision Aid

    Silviculture and Best Management Practices for the Dry-Belt Douglas-fir Area in the Cariboo Forest Region

    This document serves as a first approximation of guidelines for managing forests in British Columbia. Recognizing the historical influence of First Nations' cultural burning and the current challenges of overstocked stands and wildfire risk, it outli...
    This document serves as a first approximation of guidelines for managing forests in British Columbia. Recognizing the historical influence of First Nations' cultural burning and the current challenges of overstocked stands and wildfire risk, it outlines a strategic shift in silvicultural practices. The report details Best Management Practices (BMPs), structured around key aspects like appropriate silvicultural systems, restoration thinning, regeneration, and resilience to disturbances like fire and pests. The document aims to guide practitioners and inform policy, moving towards healthier, more resilient Douglas-fir ecosystems that balance ecological values, community safety, and sustainable resource use.
  • Case Study

    FRDA Vegetation Development After Clearcutting and Site Preparation in the SBS Zone

    This FRDA Report #018 investigates how plant communities recover in the Sub-Boreal Spruce Zone following clearcutting and various types of site preparation, specifically comparing mechanical methods and prescribed burning. The central goal was to det...
    This FRDA Report #018 investigates how plant communities recover in the Sub-Boreal Spruce Zone following clearcutting and various types of site preparation, specifically comparing mechanical methods and prescribed burning. The central goal was to determine the precise rate of revegetation development and track the resulting shifts in floristic composition and structure across four key ecosystems within the region. By examining how different herb and shrub species survive and recolonize disturbed sites, the findings generate crucial data that informs the creation of predictive models and guides forest managers in planning effective silvicultural prescriptions and wildlife habitat objectives. This study provides a foundation for understanding the long-term ecological consequences of intensive forest management practices in British Columbia.
  • Guidance Document

    LMH Silviculture Systems Handbook for British Columbia

    This LMH Document #79 outlines the principles and best practices for silvicultural systems in British Columbia, emphasizing a shift toward complex, multi-value forest management in the 21st century. Its primary purpose is to serve as a central refere...
    This LMH Document #79 outlines the principles and best practices for silvicultural systems in British Columbia, emphasizing a shift toward complex, multi-value forest management in the 21st century. Its primary purpose is to serve as a central reference and conceptual framework for forest professionals to design and implement silvicultural plans that move a stand from its current state to a desired future condition through planned interventions, known as stand development pathways. A crucial and recurring theme is the growing role of First Nations, including their traditional knowledge, values, and stewardship goals, which are integrated alongside ecological, social, and economic objectives. The document provides detailed guidance on technical aspects, such as managing for biodiversity, mitigating risks like windthrow and pests, and utilizing adaptive management for continuous improvement in forestry practices.
  • Case Study

    FRDA Effects of Site Preparation Treatments on Seedling Shoot and Root Growth - Alternatives to Broadcast Burning in the North Central Interior

    This FRDA Research Memo #241 details a study in the North-Central Interior of British Columbia comparing the effects of different site preparation treatments on the growth of lodgepole pine and hybrid white spruce seedlings. The research specifically...
    This FRDA Research Memo #241 details a study in the North-Central Interior of British Columbia comparing the effects of different site preparation treatments on the growth of lodgepole pine and hybrid white spruce seedlings. The research specifically investigated broadcast burning, disc trenching, pile-and-burn, and no treatment, analyzing their impact on soil conditions and seedling performance, including height and root growth after multiple growing seasons. Key findings indicated that disc-trenching and broadcast burning were the most effective methods for improving growth by enhancing soil properties, whereas the pile-and-burn treatment sometimes led to detrimental soil compaction due to excavator tracks, which hindered root development. Although site preparation was not necessary for high seedling survival on this particular wet, cool site, certain treatments were clearly beneficial for maximizing growth.
  • Guidance Document

    Braiding Indigenous and Western Knowledge for Climate Adapted Forests - An Ecocultural State of Science Report

    This document outlines the critical need to braid Indigenous Knowledge and Western Science to create climate-adapted forests in the United States. A primary theme is the historical impact of Euro-American colonization, fire exclusion, and settler c...
    This document outlines the critical need to braid Indigenous Knowledge and Western Science to create climate-adapted forests in the United States. A primary theme is the historical impact of Euro-American colonization, fire exclusion, and settler colonialism on North American forest ecosystems, leading to the loss of Indigenous stewardship and creating dense, fire-maladapted landscapes highly vulnerable to severe wildfires and climate change stressors. The text defines IK as an invaluable, multi-generational body of systemic knowledge and cultural practices emphasizing kinship with nature and reciprocity, contrasting it with the empirical and objective approach of WS.
  • Peer-Reviewed Literature

    Fire Smart Forest Management - A Pragmatic Approach to Sustainable Forest Management in Fire Dominated Ecosystems

    This document introduces the concept of fire-smart forest management as a pragmatic approach to achieving sustainable forest management in Canada's fire-dominated ecosystems. The core challenge addressed is how to simultaneously minimize the socioeco...
    This document introduces the concept of fire-smart forest management as a pragmatic approach to achieving sustainable forest management in Canada's fire-dominated ecosystems. The core challenge addressed is how to simultaneously minimize the socioeconomic impacts of fire while maximizing its ecological benefits, objectives that have historically been seen as contradictory. Fire-smart forest management integrates both forest and fire management activities, from stand to landscape levels, through proactive planning, such as altering forest fuels to reduce the potential for undesirable wildfires and lessen the risks associated with prescribed burning. This new paradigm is necessary because traditional aggressive fire suppression is reaching its maximum effectiveness, necessitating a shift in attitude to embrace fire's essential ecological role and mitigate its negative effects through integrated management strategies.
  • Technical Report

    Retaining Old Trees When Re-Introducing Fire into Long-Burning Forests That Historically Burned Frequently

    This document synthesizes existing knowledge on reintroducing fire into long-unburned, fire-dependent forests of the United States, specifically focusing on how to minimize mortality of large, old trees. Historically, these ecosystems experienced fre...
    This document synthesizes existing knowledge on reintroducing fire into long-unburned, fire-dependent forests of the United States, specifically focusing on how to minimize mortality of large, old trees. Historically, these ecosystems experienced frequent, low-intensity fires, which kept fuel loads low and fostered fire-tolerant species. However, over a century of fire suppression has led to unprecedented accumulations of deep duff and increased tree densities, making reintroducing fire a complex challenge that can paradoxically harm the very old trees practitioners aim to protect. The document delves into causes of tree injury and mortality from fire, such as basal cambium damage from smoldering duff and subsequent bark beetle attacks, and explores various management options including prescribed burning with the aim of restoring historical forest conditions and preserving venerable trees.
  • Webinar

    Slash Burning for Site Preparation

    This webinar outlines a successful ten-year effort to refine reforestation techniques using post-harvest slash burning in Minnesota after a large-scale jack pine budworm salvage operation. While initial attempts tried to use fire and direct seeding f...
    This webinar outlines a successful ten-year effort to refine reforestation techniques using post-harvest slash burning in Minnesota after a large-scale jack pine budworm salvage operation. While initial attempts tried to use fire and direct seeding for complete restoration, the team discovered that the prescribed burns were most effective when used as a tool for controlling aggressive woody competition like aspen. Experience taught the team that achieving deep root-kill and effective brush control depends on conducting burns during late summer dry soil conditions, which is crucial for maximizing intensity. The resulting methodology integrates fire as a hybrid replacement for chemical herbicide application, successfully preparing sites for planting and promoting the establishment of diverse jack pine stands.
  • Guidance Document

    Fuel Treatments in Whitebark Pine Forests - Limiting Whitebark Pine Mortality During Burning

    This document provides guidance on using fuel treatments and prescribed burning to protect whitebark pine forests, emphasizing methods to mitigate WBP mortality during fire. It outlines specific thresholds for crown and bark char damage that threate...
    This document provides guidance on using fuel treatments and prescribed burning to protect whitebark pine forests, emphasizing methods to mitigate WBP mortality during fire. It outlines specific thresholds for crown and bark char damage that threaten tree survival and suggests that mechanical treatments may be necessary to reduce fuels prior to burning, particularly in areas with abundant competing conifers. The document categorizes forest stands as Good, Marginal, or Avoid Candidate Areas for prescribed burning based on the presence of cone-bearing WBP trees and vigorous regeneration, advocating for mechanical fuel reduction in high-value areas and generally advising against burning stands with high levels of cone-bearing trees or limited competition. Finally, the paper recommends coordinating fire planning with silviculturists and entomologists to account for factors like mountain pine beetle pressure and ensure a heterogeneous forest structure that minimizes the risk of large, high-severity wildfires.
  • Webinar

    Our Future with Fire - Barriers and Opportunities for the Revitalization of Fire Stewardship

    This webinar highlights the urgent need to shift from aggressive fire suppression in British Columbia to a paradigm that embraces controlled fire and Indigenous fire stewardship. The webinar argues that fire exclusion has created a wildfire deficit d...
    This webinar highlights the urgent need to shift from aggressive fire suppression in British Columbia to a paradigm that embraces controlled fire and Indigenous fire stewardship. The webinar argues that fire exclusion has created a wildfire deficit disorder, resulting in massive fuel accumulation and increasingly severe, unsuppressable fire events. A core theme is the critical importance of recognizing and integrating the deep expertise of Indigenous practitioners, whose knowledge of cultural burning is often overlooked in favor of expensive and less effective suppression tactics.
  • Case Study

    Integrating Ecosystem Restoration into Forest Management Practical Examples for Foresters

    This core purpose of this document is to present ideas and case studies demonstrating how to integrate ecological restoration into routine forest management practices to enhance biodiversity, reduce risks, and achieve sustainable certification. This ...
    This core purpose of this document is to present ideas and case studies demonstrating how to integrate ecological restoration into routine forest management practices to enhance biodiversity, reduce risks, and achieve sustainable certification. This document outlines key ecological issues, such as landscape fragmentation and the loss of natural stand structural elements, and details corresponding restoration approaches across eleven distinct case studies, from restoring open forest and open range through commercial thinning to mitigating road impacts and restoring riparian habitat integrity. Finally, the document prioritizes specific forested ecosystems with high priority restoration needs in BC, offering tailored solutions for zones like the Interior Douglas-fir and Coastal Western Hemlock.
  • Decision Aid Extension Note

    Vegetation Complex Stand Establishment Decision Aid

    This document presents tools designed to assist silvicultural practitioners in making informed decisions about managing competing vegetation and forest health. This document provides crucial information on biological features and site-limiting factor...
    This document presents tools designed to assist silvicultural practitioners in making informed decisions about managing competing vegetation and forest health. This document provides crucial information on biological features and site-limiting factors for new and less experienced professionals, without making the decisions for them. The document presents three vegetation complexes in the Cariboo Forest Region including Dry Shrub, Fireweed, and Mixed Hardwood-Shrub, each detailing common species, treatment necessity based on site series, silvicultural considerations, and autecological characteristics, ultimately aiding in effective forest management strategies. The docuement also highlight other valuess such as the importance for First Nations, wildlife, and ecosystem protection.
  • Technical Report

    Principles and Practices for the Restoration of Ponderosa Pine and Dry Mixed-Conifer Forests of the Colorado Front Range

    This document outlines a framework for restoring ponderosa pine and dry mixed-conifer forests on Colorado's Front Range, addressing the increased size and severity of recent wildfires. It emphasizes understanding the historical ecological dynamics of...
    This document outlines a framework for restoring ponderosa pine and dry mixed-conifer forests on Colorado's Front Range, addressing the increased size and severity of recent wildfires. It emphasizes understanding the historical ecological dynamics of these forests, particularly changes in density and fire regimes, to inform modern management. The document details principles and guidelines for restoration and emphasizes the importance of spatial and temporal scale, enhancing desired and rare structural elements like openings and tree groups, and working with natural environmental gradients and disturbance patterns. This document provides a process for planning, implementing, and monitoring restoration projects, highlighting the crucial role of adaptive management and interdisciplinary collaboration to ensure forest resilience and sustained delivery of ecosystem services.
  • Webinar

    Can Landscape Fuel Treatments Enhance Both Protection and Resource Management Objectives

    This webinar presents results from a simulation study of north-central New Mexico that investigated the relative effectiveness of a variety of fuel treatment strategies and the tradeoffs of implementing fuels programs with competing management goals....
    This webinar presents results from a simulation study of north-central New Mexico that investigated the relative effectiveness of a variety of fuel treatment strategies and the tradeoffs of implementing fuels programs with competing management goals.
  • Peer-Reviewed Literature

    Effective Actions for Managing Rsilient High Elevation Five-Needle White Pine Forests in Western North America at Multiple Scales Under Changing Climates

    This paper addresses the severe decline of High Elevation Five-Needle White Pine forests in western North America, primarily due to mountain pine beetle outbreaks, white pine blister rust, and altered fire regimes exacerbated by changing climates. T...
    This paper addresses the severe decline of High Elevation Five-Needle White Pine forests in western North America, primarily due to mountain pine beetle outbreaks, white pine blister rust, and altered fire regimes exacerbated by changing climates. The authors advocate for multi-scaled management interventions to promote resilience to disturbances and genetic resistance to white pine blister rust. The paper details the critical need for long-term programs like inventory, mapping, and research, alongside active restoration treatments such as mechanical cuttings and prescribed fires, and proactive tree-level measures like planting rust-resistant seedlings and protecting high-value trees, all while integrating climate change considerations throughout the planning and implementation process.
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