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Fire Ecology

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Proactive approach to reduce threat of wildfire. http://www.fs.fed.us/land/wdfire.htm ... 1700s and 1800s logging, charcoal industry, wildfire encouraged oak growth ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Fire Ecology


1
Fire Ecology
  • Betty Harper
  • bjh17_at_psu.edu

2
Take home message
  • Fire frequency vs. intensity
  • Fire as a disturbance mechanism
  • Role of fire in succession
  • Evolution of fire policy
  • Plant adaptations to fire
  • Fire is not simply good or bad
  • Economic concerns may way as heavily as science
    in making decisions

3
Forest fires in the news
  • http//www.nytimes.com/college
  • Forestry search 6 out of 10 articles about
    forest fires
  • Los Alamos fires in 2000
  • Florida fires particularly bad in 1997
  • Consistent fire problems in Western US

4
Fire is a certainty
  • Fire WILL occur in most ecosystems
  • In 2002 the federal government spent 1.6 billion
    on fire suppression and still 6,937,584 acres
    burned in the US.
  • Natl Interagency Fire Center BLM, BIA, FWS,
    USFS, NPS, NOAA, OAS, NASF
  • The only question is the effect of these fires.

5
Fires ecological role
  • Disturbance is any relatively discrete event in
    time that disrupts ecosystem, community, or
    population structure and changes resources,
    substrate availability, or the physical
    environment
  • Other examples?

6
Succession
How does a lawn stay a lawn?
7
Roles
  • Reduce fuel load
  • Open understory
  • Increase light reaching forest floor
  • Favors fire-tolerant species
  • Release nutrients back into the soil or sterilize
    soil

8
Other possible effects
  • Fisheries increase water temp sedimentation,
    decrease water quality, change water chemistry
  • Destroy/create critical habitat
  • Invasive plants
  • Disease/insect infestations

9
Fire regime characteristics
  • Frequency
  • Size
  • Fire type (crown, surface, light surface)
  • Fire intensity (how hot, how long)
  • High intensity results in uniform burn
  • Low intensity effected by small-scale variability
    in fuel moisture, leaving a patchy landscape
  • All dependent variables

10
Frequency vs. Intensity
  • Inverse correlation between frequency and
    intensity
  • Prescribed/controlled fire is frequently used to
    reduce fuel loads
  • Result can be a relatively large number of cool
    burns

11
Historic perspective
  • Fire occurred periodically due to lightning, dry
    conditions, etc.
  • Native people altered the N. American landscape
    with fire
  • Took advantage of natural fire
  • Also capable of very precise controlled burns
  • Resulted in altered vegetation patterns

12
Post-European Colonization
  • Early Euro-Americans use fire use to clear land
  • 1600s current Use fire to create habitat
    favored by quail, turkey, and deer
  • Early 20th century cut out and get out
    lumbering left large loads of fuel on the ground
  • Resulting fires could be devastating and fire
    rather than poor timber harvesting practices was
    blamed

13
Policy of fire suppression
  • Fire viewed as something to be controlled
  • Aggressive fire suppression policy in wildland
    areas since the beginning of the 20th century
  • Goals of suppression
  • Protect public/private property
  • Prevent destruction of forests, grasslands, etc.
  • Protect timber resource

14
Results of suppression
  • Unprecedented fuel loads
  • More intense fires
  • Spread of invasive/non-native species
  • Ecosystem shifts
  • Suppression does not recognize the ecological
    role of fire

15
Americas most wanted
16
Todays Federal Wildland Fire Policy
  • Recognizes dangers of suppression
  • Recognizes fire as a critical natural process
  • Calls for reintroduction of fire on an
    ecologically significant scale
  • Proactive approach to reduce threat of wildfire
  • http//www.fs.fed.us/land/wdfire.htm

17
Why do we use fire?
  • Fire prevention
  • Conservation
  • Habitat improvement for species of interest
  • Restore natural or historic landscape
  • How do we define what is natural?

18
Prescribed Fire
  • Where to start?

19
Factors to consider
  • Weather (Temp, Rain, Wind)
  • Fuel load
  • Habitat type
  • Proximity to private and/or developed property
    and roads
  • Natural and human-created fire barriers

20
Fire seasonality
  • Management cool season burns are easiest to
    control, but not always best
  • Ecology if natural fire season is during the
    summer, plants may be adapted to this
  • Example wiregrass (Aristida sp.) reproduction is
    stimulated by a summer burn

21
Mortality due to fire
  • Plant susceptibility to damage/death increases
    with decreasing size
  • Herbs, seedlings, and small saplings may be
    killed by low intensity fire that has no effect
    on trees
  • Low intermediate fires may produce selective
    mortality
  • High intensity fires may kill many plants

22
Plant defenses adaptations
  • Bark
  • Height
  • Roots
  • Thick, leathery leaves with cuticle
  • Serotinous cones

23
Fire and ecosystems
  • Pennsylvania
  • Prairie grassland
  • Southeast US

24
Fire and Pennsylvania forests
  • Prior to European settlement periodic fire
    believed to have maintained forests dominated by
    oak, hickory, and American chestnut in Central PA
  • Red maple relegated to swamps due to fire
    sensitivity (soft maple)
  • 1700s and 1800s logging, charcoal industry,
    wildfire encouraged oak growth

25
  • Oaks favored by fire, relative to many other
    Northeastern, mid-Atlantic species
  • Thick bark
  • Sprouting ability
  • Resistance to rot after scarring
  • Suitability of fire-created seedbeds for acorn
    germination

26
  • Now were suppressing fire and logging less ?
    succession is moving along again
  • Theory Historic PA forests represented a early
    to mid-successional stage prior to domination by
    more shade-tolerant, later successional species
    (such as red maple)

27
Fire and grassland ecosystems
  • Fire reduces shade, eliminates thatch layer,
    increases seed germination, releases nutrients
    into the soil
  • Fire prevents establishment of trees and shrubs
    that would eventually out-compete and shade out
    the grasses
  • Fire adaptation many grassland plants have no
    permanent aboveground parts

28
Fire in the southeast
  • Wet and dry seasons
  • Fire adapted plants
  • Sand pine (Pinus clausa) serotinous cones
  • Wiregrass meristem is 1-1.5 underground
  • Long leaf pine (Pinus palustra) large
    underground root system, rapid growth, thick bark

29
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30
All other things similar
  • Frequent, low intensity fires ? Sandhill open
    stands of longleaf or slash pine (Pinus
    elliottii) with grassy understory
  • Less frequent, more severe fires ? Sand pine
    scrub closed canopy of sand pine with dense
    understory
  • Absence of fire ? Xeric hardwoods dominated by
    evergreen oaks and hickories

31
Yellowstone, 1988
  • Driest summer in Parks history
  • 9000 fire fighters, 120 million
  • gt 3 million dollars in property damage
  • Fires not extinguished until autumn snow began
  • 1.2 million acres in the Greater Yellowstone area
    burned

32
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33
  • Post 1988 ? ample precipitation combined with ash
    and nutrient influx from fire resulted in
    abundant wildflowers
  • Lodgepole pine seed densities of 50,000 to 1
    million per acre beginning new cycle of forest
    growth
  • Stable ecosystems can recover from even
    catastrophic fire

34
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35
Healthy Forest Initiative
  • Catastrophic fires due to fuel buildup
  • Goal is to reduce fuel load with
  • Thinning
  • Prescribed burning
  • Forest restoration projects
  • Remove administrative obstacles to timber
    projects
  • Balance environmental needs w/ community needs

36
Opposition to the plan
  • An excuse for more logging
  • Logging companies will leave saplings and brush
  • Degrades habitat
  • Will actually result in more fuel
  • Eliminates checks balances
  • http//www.wildrockies.org/wildfire/Chad_oped.html
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