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 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.

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Author A.A. Bernal, S.L. Stephens, M.A. Callaham, B.M. Collins, J.A. Crotteau, M.B. Dickinson, D.L. Hagan, R. Hedges, S.M. Hood, T.F. Hutchinson, M.K. Taylor, T.A. Coates
Publication Year 2024
License Creative Commons Attribution
Last Updated October 1, 2025, 22:46 (UTC)
Created October 1, 2025, 22:45 (UTC)