Conservation Northwest

Winter 2015 Conservation Northwest Quarterly

Conservation Northwest protects and connects old-growth forests and other wild areas from the Washington Coast to the British Columbia Rockies, vital to a healthy future for us, our children, and wildlife. Since 1989, Conservation Northwest has worke

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4 Winter 2015 conservationnw.org Fire is a prominent and inevitable natural disturbance in many forests of western North America. It provides essential ecological services such as nutrient recycling , regulating the density and composition of trees, and creating and main- taining wildlife habitat. At the landscape scale, large wildfire events reshape vegetation patterns and alter sediment move- ment, flood activity, and other watershed processes. Fires his- torically created a mosaic of forest types and structural condi- tions across landscapes that enhanced resistance and resilience to future disturbance events. But fires are not all the same. Wildfire behavior varies dra- matically among forest types and regions. As we seek to manage wildlands, these differences must be considered to ensure that management actions will be effective and will sustain ecological values such as healthy wildlife populations. e ecological variability within our forests defies a simple, one-size-fits-all management prescription for wildfires. How- ever, certain forest types have predictable relationships to fire regimes, and those relationships can be used to inform wildfire and forest management strategies even in highly altered forests or topographically complex wild landscapes. Fire regimes can be classified according to severity as follows: • Low-severity fire regime: Many pine and dry mixed- conifer forests at lower elevations are characterized by low-severity fires. Such fires historically burned fine fuels (e.g., grasses and forest floor litter) at regular and frequent intervals, killing many smaller trees but few large, fire- resistant overstory trees. Reducing small tree density while retaining and cultivating large and/or old trees and snags and dispersed clumps of smaller trees is critical to restoring and maintaining ecological functions. • High-severity fire regime: Forests characterized by high-severity fires include moist, marine-influenced for- ests, subalpine and high elevation forests, and spruce, true fir, and lodgepole pine forests. Forests subject to high-severity fires typically support high densities of trees and large fuel loads. In these forests, high-severity fires are relatively infrequent—occurring at intervals of one to many centuries—and are predominantly driven by climate, so fire exclusion has had little to no effect on fuels or forest structures. Hence, management actions are generally ecologically inappropriate. • Mixed-severity fire regime: Fire is variable in sever- ity and frequency in many mid-elevation and some low elevation dry and mixed-conifer forests. Topographi- cally complex mountain landscapes may be especially prone to mixed-severity fire because drier south-facing slopes with lower fuel loads can burn at low severity when adjacent, moister north-facing slopes that support higher tree densities experience high-severity fire. Such complex mosaics necessitate planning at larger spatial scales to identify portions of the landscape that may warrant management actions. As we dive further into the topic of wildfire in this issue, and its effects on wildlands and wildfire, we'll be discussing the primary factors agencies, land managers, and organiza- tions like Conservation Northwest must consider when it comes to restoring fire to its rightful place on the landscape. As we'll see, the key to managing fire for the future is learning to see this natural process at the scale of the landscape that it transforms and renews. Reducing density of small trees while retaining older trees, snags, and dispersed clumps of smaller trees (as shown here) is critical for ensuring wildfire behavior that creates and maintains healthy forest habitat. Photo: David Heflick a wildfire primer FIrE: ThE GrEAT rECyClEr Dave Werntz Science and conservation director, dave@conservationnw.org Photo: © Brett Cole, brettcolephotography.com Wildfire science

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