42 resources found

Tags: USA

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  • Webinar

    Biochar in the Forest - Status Update

    This webianr explored the use of biochar as a promising but highly variable soil amendment intended to enhance forest climate resilience, focusing on its potential for increased water holding capacity and long-term carbon storage. Lead researcher, Ma...
    This webianr explored the use of biochar as a promising but highly variable soil amendment intended to enhance forest climate resilience, focusing on its potential for increased water holding capacity and long-term carbon storage. Lead researcher, Marcelo Windmuller-Campione, detailed multiple collaborative studies, primarily testing biochara?Ts effectiveness on Jack Pine survival and growth in Minnesota's porous, sandy soils. While initial benefits were sometimes observed in early field trials, long-term data and controlled experiments indicated that the biochar provided no significant or lasting improvement compared to control groups. The research concluded that while biochar presents a viable carbon storage strategy, its operational feasibility and ecological benefits are severely limited when applied to highly porous forest ecosystems.
  • Webinar

    Silvicultural Systems

    This webinar details the core concepts of silvicultural systems, which are comprehensive approaches to forest management defined by three continuous elements: regeneration, tending, and harvesting. These systems are structured along a practical spect...
    This webinar details the core concepts of silvicultural systems, which are comprehensive approaches to forest management defined by three continuous elements: regeneration, tending, and harvesting. These systems are structured along a practical spectrum of harvest intensity, starting with low-disturbance selection methods suitable for shade-tolerant species and culminating in high-intensity treatments like clearcutting, which favor light-demanding species. The choice of technique, such as the multi-step shelterwood method or the more localized seed tree method, depends entirely on the desired future condition of the stand and the ecology of the target tree species. Successful silviculture is presented as both a science and an art, requiring creative application of various treatments, including intermediate thinning, to achieve specific outcomes.
  • Guidance Document

    Technical Guidance for Standardized Silvicultural Prescriptions for Managing Old-Growth Forests

    This guidance document establishes a Standard Silvicultural Prescription Process for the conservation and stewardship of old-growth forests on National Forest System lands. Its fundamental objective is to provide detailed direction for maintaining or...
    This guidance document establishes a Standard Silvicultural Prescription Process for the conservation and stewardship of old-growth forests on National Forest System lands. Its fundamental objective is to provide detailed direction for maintaining or restoring the ecological integrity and resilience of these valuable ecosystems against threats like wildfire, insects, and climate change, emphasizing that treatments should not be driven by economic reasons. The structured approach involves five key phases, starting with a rigorous stand examination and diagnosis to determine treatment needs, which prioritize less intensive methods such as prescribed fire and thinning. This guidance ensures that management activities are monitored and evaluated to enhance the durability, resilience, and resistance of existing old-growth forest conditions.
  • 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.
  • 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.
  • Peer-Reviewed Literature

    Challenges Facing Gap-Based Silviculture and Possible Solutions for Mesic Northern Forests in North America

    This paper explores the complexities and challenges associated with using gap-based silviculture in the mesic northern forests of North America. The authors begin by outlining the theoretical basis of gap management, which assumes that creating canop...
    This paper explores the complexities and challenges associated with using gap-based silviculture in the mesic northern forests of North America. The authors begin by outlining the theoretical basis of gap management, which assumes that creating canopy openings enhances tree species diversity. However, the paper emphasizes that relying solely on varying gap size often falls short of achieving diversity goals due to a multitude of interacting factors beyond light availability. These crucial factors include site history, seed dispersal, competition from other vegetation, and the impact of herbivores. The authors propose a revised, more integrated concept of gap-based silviculture that incorporates a broader range of ecological considerations and active management of understory conditions to promote structural complexity and enhance tree species diversity in these valuable forest ecosystems.
  • Extension Note

    The Shelterwood Silvicultural System in British Columbia - A Practitioner's Guide. Part 3 Operational Implementation

    This guide serves as a practical manual for foresters looking to implement the shelterwood cutting method in British Columbia. As the third part of a three-part series, this guide builds upon previous parts by focusing on the specific harvesting oper...
    This guide serves as a practical manual for foresters looking to implement the shelterwood cutting method in British Columbia. As the third part of a three-part series, this guide builds upon previous parts by focusing on the specific harvesting operations involved in this silvicultural system. The guide emphasizes that each harvest entry is a deliberate silvicultural treatment designed to manipulate the forest environment to achieve regeneration and stand-tending objectives, highlighting key considerations like protecting the soil, existing trees, and new growth while promoting a favorable environment for the next forest generation.
  • Technical Report

    Science Basis for Changing Forest Structure to Modify Wildfire Behaviour and Severity

    This report compiles over 80 years of fire research to explain how human interventions have altered natural fire regimes, particularly in dry Western U. S. forests. The document emphasizes that accumulated fuels and dense forest structures, a departu...
    This report compiles over 80 years of fire research to explain how human interventions have altered natural fire regimes, particularly in dry Western U. S. forests. The document emphasizes that accumulated fuels and dense forest structures, a departure from historical conditions, lead to more intense and severe wildfires, posing risks to both ecosystems and human communities. It details various fuel treatments, such as thinning and prescribed fire, as crucial strategies for restoring fire-resilient forests by reducing surface, ladder, and crown fuels. The report advocates for a landscape-level approach to fuel management, acknowledging that while models and observations inform these efforts, uncertainties remain in predicting exact fire behavior.
  • Peer-Reviewed Literature

    The National Fire and Fire Surrogate Study Effects of Fuel Treatments in the Western and Eastern United States After 20 Years

    This paper presents the long-term ecological effects of forest fuel and restoration treatments from the ongoing national Fire and Fire Surrogate study, analyzing data collected over approximately 20 years across four diverse sites in the Western and...
    This paper presents the long-term ecological effects of forest fuel and restoration treatments from the ongoing national Fire and Fire Surrogate study, analyzing data collected over approximately 20 years across four diverse sites in the Western and Eastern United States. The central goal of the original FFS study was to evaluate how mechanical treatments and prescribed fire impact forest ecosystems by reducing fire hazard, promoting desirable fire-adapted species, and improving understory diversity. Key findings reveal that the most effective treatment varies significantly by region: mechanical treatments combined with fire yielded better long-term outcomes in Western pine-dominated forests, while prescribed burning alone proved more beneficial in Eastern hardwood-dominated forests. The authors conclude that to maintain these desirable conditions and achieve long-term resilience, treatments must be adapted to the specific ecosystem and followed up with repeated applications.
  • Community of Practice

    Association of Fire Ecology

    The Association for Fire Ecology is an international organization dedicated to improving the knowledge and use of fire in land management. The Association is made up of scientists, educators, students, managers, practitioners, policymakers, and inter...
    The Association for Fire Ecology is an international organization dedicated to improving the knowledge and use of fire in land management. The Association is made up of scientists, educators, students, managers, practitioners, policymakers, and interested citizens helping to shape the emerging profession and growing field of fire ecology.
  • Community of Practice

    Sustainable Forestry Initiative

    SFI's mission is to advance sustainability through forest-focused collaboration. As an independent, non-profit organization, we collaborate with our diverse network to help address local and global sustainability challenges. SFI works with the forest...
    SFI's mission is to advance sustainability through forest-focused collaboration. As an independent, non-profit organization, we collaborate with our diverse network to help address local and global sustainability challenges. SFI works with the forest sector, brand owners, conservation groups, resource professionals, landowners, educators, local communities, Indigenous Peoples, governments, and universities.
  • Community of Practice

    Prescribed Fire Training Exchange (TREX)

    Prescribed Fire Training Exchanges and cooperative burns provide experiential training that builds robust local capacity for fire management and offers fire practitioners a more holistic perspectivea?\"while implementing treatments that support comm...
    Prescribed Fire Training Exchanges and cooperative burns provide experiential training that builds robust local capacity for fire management and offers fire practitioners a more holistic perspectivea?\"while implementing treatments that support community and landscape objectives. TREX provides a unique cooperative burning model that services the needs of a variety of entities, including federal and state agencies, private landowners and contractors, tribes, academics, and international partnersa?\"while incorporating local values and issues to build the right kinds of capacity in the right places. Most TREX events take place in the spring or fall, when conditions are mostly likely to be good for safe and effective prescribed burning.
  • Training

    Climate Change Response Framework Training and Workshops

    The Climate Change Response Framework provides workshops and training opportunities. See their website for more information on upcoming opportunities.
  • Peer-Reviewed Literature

    Disparate Groundwater Responses to Wildfire

    This paper synthesizes the disparate groundwater responses to wildfire, noting that post-fire effects range from significant increases to decreases in water fluxes like recharge and baseflow. The authors evaluate this variability across five primary ...
    This paper synthesizes the disparate groundwater responses to wildfire, noting that post-fire effects range from significant increases to decreases in water fluxes like recharge and baseflow. The authors evaluate this variability across five primary categories: climate, vegetation, hydrogeology, fire characteristics, and the cryosphere, focusing on both short-term and intermediate recovery periods. A critical finding is that post-wildfire responses often align with hydroclimatic settings where water input and evaporative demand are out of sync, while the pre-wildfire groundwater regime significantly influences the expected outcome and recovery trajectory. This paper provides a collection of testable hypotheses and identifies key areas, particularly the influence of snow dynamics and cryospheric processes, for future monitoring and modeling efforts to improve the prediction of groundwater recovery after fires.
  • Podcast

    Welcome to Good Fire

    The Good Fire Podcast explores the concept of fire as a tool for ecological health, cultural empowerment, and Indigenous stewardship. The term good fire refers to intentional, controlled burns used by Indigenous communities to maintain healthy landsc...
    The Good Fire Podcast explores the concept of fire as a tool for ecological health, cultural empowerment, and Indigenous stewardship. The term good fire refers to intentional, controlled burns used by Indigenous communities to maintain healthy landscapes and cultural traditions.
  • Peer-Reviewed Literature

    Wildfire Facilitates Upslope Advance in a Shade-Intolerant but not a Shade-Tolerant Conifer

    This paper investigates how wildfires influence the upward migration of tree species in California's subalpine forests, a phenomenon often linked to climate change. Researchers examined post-fire tree regeneration across various fire severities, focu...
    This paper investigates how wildfires influence the upward migration of tree species in California's subalpine forests, a phenomenon often linked to climate change. Researchers examined post-fire tree regeneration across various fire severities, focusing on the contrasting responses of shade-tolerant and shade-intolerant conifer species. While overall montane species regeneration decreased in burned areas, shade-intolerant Jeffrey pine showed increased success in severely burned plots, aligning with predictions of higher climatic suitability. Conversely, shade-tolerant red fir regeneration declined significantly with higher fire severity, suggesting that the specific regeneration niche of a species, its ideal post-fire conditions, is critical in determining whether fire facilitates or hinders its range expansion.
  • Peer-Reviewed Literature

    Forest Thinning and Prescribed Burning Treatments Reduce Wildfire Severity and Buffer the Impacts of Severe Fire Weather

    This paper investigates the effectiveness of different forest fuel treatments, such as thinning and prescribed burning, in reducing the severity of subsequent wildfires. Leveraging a unique 1200-hectare experiment that was later impacted by a signifi...
    This paper investigates the effectiveness of different forest fuel treatments, such as thinning and prescribed burning, in reducing the severity of subsequent wildfires. Leveraging a unique 1200-hectare experiment that was later impacted by a significant wildfire, the authors compared various treatment approaches, including thin-only, burn-only, and a combination of both, against an untreated control. Their analysis of fire severity metrics, considering pre-fire fuel conditions and fire weather, provides strong evidence that proactive fuel management, especially combining thinning and burning, significantly mitigates wildfire intensity and damage to trees, even decades after the treatments were implemented and under a range of weather conditions. The study supports the continued use of these treatments as valuable tools for forest restoration and enhancing resilience to increasingly severe wildfires.
  • Case Study

    Reburn in the Rain Shadow

    This paper investigates the long-term effects of post-wildfire logging in dry coniferous forests east of the Cascade Range. It addresses a key debate by presenting findings that post-fire logging effectively reduces future surface woody fuel levels ...
    This paper investigates the long-term effects of post-wildfire logging in dry coniferous forests east of the Cascade Range. It addresses a key debate by presenting findings that post-fire logging effectively reduces future surface woody fuel levels over several decades, thereby potentially mitigating the severity of subsequent wildfires. Furthermore, the research indicates that when best management practices are employed, post-fire logging has minimal lasting negative impacts on the recovery of understory vegetation. The purpose of this publication is to provide scientific information to land managers making decisions about post-fire forest management, particularly regarding fuel reduction and ecological impacts.
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