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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. -
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. -
Mitigating Old Tree Mortality in Long-Unburned Fire-Dependent Forests A Synthesis
This report addresses the critical issue of maintaining large, old trees in United States forests that historically experienced frequent fires but have been subjected to long periods of fire suppression. The document synthesizes existing research to ...This report addresses the critical issue of maintaining large, old trees in United States forests that historically experienced frequent fires but have been subjected to long periods of fire suppression. The document synthesizes existing research to understand how reintroducing fire through prescribed burning impacts these venerable trees, particularly concerning injury and mortality. It delves into the causes of tree death from fire, including heat damage to crowns, cambium, and roots, with a specific focus on the role of accumulated duff and subsequent bark beetle attacks. Furthermore, the report examines management options and treatment effects aimed at enhancing old tree resilience during prescribed burns, offering practical guidance on techniques like duff raking and burning under specific conditions, ultimately striving to balance ecological restoration with the conservation of these keystone forest components.