What's New

2nd Fire Behavior and Fuels Conference will be held in Destin, Florida March 26-30, 2007.

The Teakettle Ecosystem Experiment and Fire and Forest Health DVD Site!

SageSTEP Land Management Treatments

The 2007 EastFIRE Conference will be held in Fairfax, Virginia June 5-8, 2007.

National Interagency Fire Center
For the most current fire information available...

Principal Investigator's Corner

Final Report Guidelines
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JFSP Project Deliverables

You may search JFSP Products by the following: Project Number, Title, Principal Investigator, Cooperators or key words contained in a brief description of the project.

Demonstration Sites, Admin. Studies and Local Needs

Select a fiscal year for when the Announcement for Proposal was issued for the project:

FY 2004

Integrating Social Values in Vegetation Models via GIS: the missing link for the Bitterroot National Forest

Project # 04-2-1-114; Principal Investigator: Alan Watson

We propose an eighteen month research and application project to improve methods for presentation of fuzzy data (social values) in GIS format. Such methods are needed to further increase effectiveness of integration of human values into planning fire and fuels treatments. Information on social effects of alternatives is necessary for NEPA documentation, and while there are several possible techniques to accomplish this objective, none that are GIS-based have been tested sufficiently or peer-reviewed, nor are any theoretically based. Proposed research will be conducted in and for the Bitterroot Ecosystem Management Research Project (BEMRP), a partnership of federal land managers, researchers and the public. BEMRP’s current priority is on-site hazardous fuels treatments for a landscape-scale green fuel reduction/restoration program.

Final Report pdf document (1,665 kb)
Appendix 1 pdf document (32 kb)
Appendix 2 pdf document (4,931 kb)
Appendix 3 pdf document (37 kb)
Appendix 4 pdf document (797 kb)

Research Update Paper pdf document (190 kb)

Guide to Methods Used for Developing, Analyzing, and Preparing Social Data Related to Attachment to Place pdf document (1,368 kb)

FY 2001

Assessing anthropogenic changes in fire regimes using relict areas in El Malpais National Monument, New Mexico

Project # 01-3-3-29; Principal Investigator: Henri Grissino-Mayer

Ecosystem processes that maintained Southwestern forests during pre-settlement times are currently operating outside the normal range of historical variation. One challenge in restoring these areas to more natural conditions is that few un-impacted sites exist to serve as management references or targets. Relic, minimally impacted, natural areas found in isolated locations in New Mexico may be able to meet this need. Researchers plan to reconstruct the fire history from fire scars collected from pines growing on selected kipukas in El Malpais National Monument in New Mexico. Results of this work can be used by park personnel in development of management guidelines and policies consistent with the restoration of fire as an ecosystem process.

Project Website

Jeffrey pine-mixed conifer fire history and forest structure with and without fire suppression and harvesting

Project # 01-3-3-27; Principal Investigator: Carl Skinner

The absence of fire in the 20th century combined with past harvesting practices have modified the structure and ecosystem processes of California forests resulting in a decrease in forest sustainability. Ecosystem structure existing prior to European settlement is commonly used as a target condition for restoring these ecosystems but there is a scarcity of unmanaged forests in the western U.S. that could serve as references. Researchers will collect and compare information on stand structures in an unmanaged Jeffrey pine-mixed conifer forests in the Sierra San Pedro Martir in northern Mexico with similar managed forests in California and Nevada. Results from this work will be used to describe forest stand structures that could be used both as targets for fire hazard reduction treatments and forest restoration work.

Final Report pdf document (1,050 kb)

Evaluating the effects of prescribed fire and fuels treatment on water quality and aquatic habitat

Project # 01-3-3-18; Principal Investigator: Steve Wondzell

In the interior Columbia Basin, treatments to reduce long-term risks from wildfire are often motivated by potential threats to water and threatened and endangered salmonids. Management plans for the basin assume that direct effects of wildfires and wildfire related erosion are greater threats to water quality and fish habitat than are the effects of fuel treatments. However empirical data to support this assumption is scarce. Researchers will study the effects of mechanical fuel treatments and prescribed fire on surface erosion and stream sedimentation in two watersheds in Oregon. Information from the study will be used to refine erosion and sediment delivery models used in planning and assessing management activities.

Final Report pdf document (194 kb)

Effects of prescribed grazing and burning treatments on fire regimes in alien grass dominated wildland urban interface areas, Leeward Hawaii

Project # 01-3-2-14; Principal Investigator: Michael Castillo

The northwest leeward part of the island of Hawaii once harbored one of the most unique tropical dry forest ecosystems in the world. Alien grass-fueled wildfire has led to conversion of these dry forest and shrublands to more open savannas and grasslands. The dry forest ecosystems have been reduced to remnant patches. In addition, as a result of fire and other factors 31 dry forest plants, 3 species of birds, and one bat are in danger of extinction. Researchers will assess the feasibility of a variety of fuel treatments (including grazing, burning, herbicides or combinations of the three treatments) in managing these dry forests and restoring more historic fire regimes.

Final Report pdf document (5,515 kb)

Draft 55-Year Fire History of West Hawaii pdf document (298 kb)

The Puu Anahulu Wildfire Management Study: Techniques for Managing Invasive Grass Fuel Loads Brochure pdf document (359 kb)

Weed Invasions Following Fire in Southwestern Colorado: Long-Term Effectiveness of Mitigation Treatments and Future Predictions

Project # 01-3-2-12; Principal Investigator: Lisa Floyd-Hanna

This study investigated the patterns and processes of weed invasion following the 1989, 1996, and 2000 fires in Mesa Verde National Park (MNVP), to identify the kinds of plant communities that are most vulnerable to post-fire weed invasion, and to evaluate the effectiveness of a variety of weed mitigation methods including aerial seeding of native grasses, chemical eradication, and mechanical eradication.

Final Report pdf document (1,358 kb)

Further information at: http://www.usgs.nau.edu/SWEPIC/index.html

Prescribed fire for fuel reduction in northern mixed grass prairie: influence on habitat and population dynamics of indigenous wildlife

Project # 01-3-2-09; Principal Investigator: Robert Murphy

National Wildlife Refuges (NWRs) and other reserves have been established to conserve examples of native grassland ecosystems. In NWRs in the Dakotas and eastern Montana approximately 10,000 hectares of mostly mixed grass prairie is burned annually to reduce accumulating fuels and risk of catastrophic wildfire. The effects of these fires on prairie wildlife, especially migratory birds, are not well understood. Researchers will document the effects of prescribed burning of northern mixed grass prairie in North Dakota on migratory birds, small mammals, and vegetation structure. Study results will provide information that will help land managers evaluate use of prescribed burning in achieving wildlife refuge goals.

Final Report pdf document

Further information at: http://www.fws.gov/jclarksalyer/Joint%20Fire%20Science%20Report/Main_Page.htm

Two demonstration sites in Northern Arizona for forest thinning, fire use, and fire surrogate treatments in the ponderosa pine type

Project # 01-3-1-06; Principal Investigator: Edward Smith

In Arizona, a number of efforts are underway to look at the effects of different fuel treatments to reintroduce fire and restore ecosystem processes. Researchers plan to develop two of these sites into demonstration sites to promote thinning, prescribed burning, and fire surrogate treatments in the national forests in Arizona. One of the demonstration sites is located in the Flagstaff Wildland-Urban Interface and the other is at the Nature Conservancy’s Hart Prairie Preserve. Through these efforts researchers hope to improve technology transfer among researchers and land managers related to fuels reduction activities, to improve public outreach related to restoring ecosystem processes, and to increase opportunities for ecological fire use training.

Final Report pdf document (34 kb)

Watershed Restoration of a High Elevation Riparian Community pdf document (394 kb)
GUIDING PRINCIPLES FOR FOREST ECOSYSTEM RESTORATION AND COMMUNITY PROTECTION pdf document (27 kb)

Demonstrating the Ecological Effects of Mechanical Thinning and Prescribed Fire on Mixed-Conifer Forests

Project # 01-3-1-05; Principal Investigator: Malcolm North

A critical question in the Sierra Nevada is how to effectively use fuel treatments to restore forest ecosystems. The Teakettle Ecosystem Experiment was designed to compare the effects of fire and thinning on fundamental ecological processes in an old-growth forest by applying fire and thinning manipulations in a full factorial design. Integrated sampling methods and coordinated studies were used to examine vegetation, soil, microclimate, invertebrate and tree response conditions for 2-3 years before and for 3 years after treatments on 18 replicated plots.

The Teakettle Experiment

Further information is available at: http://teakettle.ucdavis.edu/index.htm

Fire Effects on Rare Flora and Fauna in Southern California National Forests

Project # 01B-3-3-28; Principal Investigator: Jan Beyers

The four southern California National Forests (Angeles, Cleveland, Los Padres, and San Bernardino) and adjoining areas are home to at least 60 threatened and endangered plant and animal species. The Forest Service lists another 164 species in this area as sensitive. While fire is a natural habitat component for most of these species, little is known about the types of fire regimes to which they are adapted. At the same time, prescribed fire and other fuel treatments are increasingly being applied in these areas. Scientists are working to compile information about potential fire responses of these species via review of scientific literature, field surveys and experiments. Information gathered will provide additional data for the national Fire Effects Information System database (FEIS) that managers use in planning fuels management projects.

Final Report pdf document (37 kb)

Using a “Fire Cage” to Test the Response of Arabis Johnstonii to Fire pdf document

Fuels Management and Non-native Plant Species: An Evaluation of Fire and Fire Surrogate Treatments in Chaparral Plant Community

Project # 01B-3-3-27; Principal Investigator: Jennifer Gibson

In California’s Whiskeytown National Recreation Area, as in many natural areas, the exclusion of fire, along with grazing, mining, and timber harvests of the twentieth century has resulted in deterioration of fire adapted plant communities. Park managers are proposing to carry out fire surrogate treatments, such as prescribed burning and thinning, as part of a progressive and ambitious fuels management program. However there are concerns that the combination of fire and ground disturbing activities associated with mechanical treatments will create conditions favoring the invasion of non-native plant species. Researchers are examining the effects of four different fuels reduction treatments on soil, vegetation, and other site factors. Results from this research will enable fire managers to more effectively manage sites for forest productivity while minimizing the spread of invasive plant species.

Additional information can be found at: http://www.nps.gov/whis/exp/fireweb/FireEcology/BrushMastication/intro.htm

Final Report pdf document (1,904 kb)

Fire Knowledge for Managing Cascadian Whitebark Pine Forests

Project # 01B-3-3-26; Principal Investigator: Michael Murray

Whitebark pine forests are an important feature of the Cascade Mountain Range. These fire-dependent forests are declining from an introduced disease and possibly fire exclusion. Managers in the region are mandated to maintain these forests within National Parks and Wilderness Areas where they are valued by tourists, recreationists, and wildlife. Although current Fire Management Plans are calling for increased prescribed fire, they lack any science-based objectives for fire frequency, severity, and size pertaining to these forests because no formal research has been conducted in the Cascades. Knowledge of fire regimes is critical for burn unit planning. This project will provide a baseline of knowledge by documenting fire regimes and conditions for the different whitebark pine fuel types. These research findings and management guidelines will be articulated in a general technical report aimed at better preparing managers to complete fire planning for Cascadian whitebark pine forests.

Final Report pdf document (976 kb)

Effects of season and interval of prescribed burns in a ponderosa pine ecosystem

Project # 01B-3-3-16; Principal Investigator: Walter Thies

Many ponderosa pine stands are currently past their historic fire return interval and are at high risk for catastrophic wildfire. Prescribed burning is being used as a management tool to reduce fuel loads and restore ecosystem function, however, the consequences of different prescribed burning regimes on levels of tree injury and tree mortality due to insects and disease are not well understood. Moreover, a critical question facing forest managers is how timing of prescribed fire impacts understory plant communities and invasive exotic species. Building upon an ongoing study in the Blue Mountains of Oregon, researchers are looking at the effects of burn intervals and season of burn on tree growth and mortality, understory vegetation, and fuel levels. Researchers will determine the parameters that best predict (1) which fire injured trees will be killed by insects and diseases, and (2) patterns of understory vegetation recovery and exotic species under different burning regimes. Information gleaned from this study will assist managers in decisions about wildland fuel management.

Final Report pdf document (156 kb)

Prediction of delayed mortality of fire-damaged ponderosa pine
following prescribed fires in eastern Oregon, USA
pdf document (196 kb)

Season of Prescribed Burn in Ponderosa Pine Forests in Eastern Oregon: impact on Pine Mortality pdf document (208 kb)

Integrating prescribed fire into management of mixed-oak forests of the mid-atlantic region: Developing basic fire behavior and fuels information for the silvah system

Project # 01B-3-3-15; Principal Investigator: Patrick Brose

The near elimination of the natural fire regime of mixed-oak forests of the Mid-Atlantic region has led to several undesirable changes. One of these is the inability of oaks to regenerate on their own. Managers are increasingly interested in using prescribed fire to create conditions that will sustain mixed-oak forests but there is a lack of knowledge about fire behavior and fire effects in these ecosystems. Scientists are evaluating the applicability of existing hardwood fuel models to a wide variety of fuel conditions in mixed-oak forests. A photo-series illustrating fuel conditions not well represented by existing fuel models is also being developed. Prescribed fire planning and implementation in these forests will become more effective and safer with this information.

Final Report pdf document (409 kb)

Sample Photo Series pdf document (605 kb)

MORTALITY, SURVIVAL, AND GROWTH OF INDIVIDUAL STEMS AFTER
PRESCRIBED BURNING IN RECENT HARDWOOD CLEARCUTS
pdf document (70 kb)

Fire and forest structure across vegetation gradients in San Juan National Forest, Colorado: a multi–scaled historical analysis

Project # 01B-3-3-13; Principal Investigator: Peter Brown

Profound changes in forest structure in many forests of the western United States have resulted from fire exclusion and land use that accompanied Euro-American settlement. To better document the impacts of fire exclusion and land use on different forest types, specific quantitative data are needed to compare and contrast forest conditions at multiple spatial and temporal scales. Researchers intend to reconstruct past fires and resulting forest structure of forests in the San Juan National Forest in southern Colorado using state of the art dendrochronological methods. Results of this work will have direct applicability to on-going and proposed forest restoration and fuels treatments in the San Juan and adjacent national forests.

Final Report pdf document (1,538 kb)

Project Website

Fuel Reduction Effects on a Key Sierra Food Web

Project # 01B-3-3-05; Principal Investigator: Malcolm North

In the Sierra Nevada, the California spotted owl depends on a food web that involves linkages between trees, ectomycorrhizal fungi and the truffles they produce, and small mammals that feed on the truffles. These small mammals are in turn prey for the owl. Fire fundamentally changes a forest’s composition and function but little is known about its effect on the food web structure. Researchers are gathering information to help managers design forest management and fuel reduction policies that minimize impacts on the threatened California spotted owl.

Final Report pdf document (36 kb)

Fire and Thinning Effects on Truffles pdf document
Fungi in Flying Squirrels and Chipmunks pdf document
Hypogeous Fungal Species on Roots and in Small Mammal Diet pdf document
Nest Trees of Northern Flying Squirrels pdf document
Small Mammal and Truffle Response to Burning pdf document
Truffle Abundance pdf document

The Teakettle Ecosystem Experiment website

Effects of fire and rehabilitation seeding on sage grouse habitat in the pinyon-juniper zone

Project # 01B-3-3-01; Principal Investigator: Jeannie Chambers

Since settlement of the Great Basin region about 130 years ago, pinyon and juniper trees have been expanding into sagebrush ecosystems resulting in the progressive elimination of sagebrush, grass, and forb species. These changes, in combination with expansion of invasive annual grasses, have led to dramatic increases in fire frequency, severity, and size. Managers are working to mitigate these fire impacts with fuel management treatments and post fire rehabilitation seeding. However, management plans need to consider the effects of these activities on species such as sage grouse, a bird under consideration for listing as a threatened or endangered species. Researchers are studying the effects of fire and rehabilitation seeding on sagebrush habitat and bird species to help inform and guide management decisions in this fire prone area.

Final Report pdf document (393 kb)

Determining the ecological effects of fire suppression, fuels treatment, and wildfire through bird monitoring in the Klamath ecoregion of Southern Oregon and Northern California

Project # 01B-3-2-10; Principal Investigator: John Alexander

Large-scale fire management practices can lead to habitat alterations such as changes in vegetation and the availability and type of food resources. These changes can have significant impacts on bird communities. Researchers working in the Klamath Ecoregion of Southern Oregon and Northern California are studying how bird distribution and abundance has been influenced by fire and various fuel treatments. They are also developing and implementing a multi-year monitoring plan to assess bird distribution and abundance after intensive wildfires. Information from this study can help managers in planning fuel management treatments that minimize the impacts on birds.

Final Report pdf document (356 kb)

Decision support tool for land managers can be found at The Klamath Bird Observatory website.

Pre-Fire Fuel Manipulation Impacts on Alien Plant Invasion of Wildlands

Project # 01B-3-2-08; Principal Investigator: Jon Keeley

Natural and prescribed fires play a role in stimulating the invasion of alien plants on many federal lands. However, pre-fire fuel manipulation techniques, such as the construction of fuel breaks, may also worsen invasive weed problems. Of particular concern is the degree to which these fuel breaks act as a source of alien weed seeds following fire. Scientists are conducting vegetative surveys on fuel breaks in southern California, the central coast, and the Sierra Nevada to understand the contributions of these fuel breaks to weed species populations in adjacent wildlands. Information from this research will help managers to develop fuel management strategies that accomplish fuel hazard reduction goals and minimize alien plant threats.

Final Report pdf document (201 kb)

Plot shape effects on plant species diversity measurements pdf document (139 kb)
FUEL BREAKS AFFECT NONNATIVE SPECIES ABUNDANCE IN CALIFORNIAN PLANT COMMUNITIES pdf document (455 kb)
Fuel Modification Impacts on Nonnative Plant Invasion pdf document (47 kb)

PRE-FIRE FUEL MANIPULATION IMPACTS ON ALIEN PLANT INVASION OF WILDLANDS

Management of fuel loading in the shrub-steppe

Project # 01B-3-2-07; Principal Investigator: Steven Link

The invasion of the exotic weed, cheatgrass, into the Colombia National Wildlife Refuge in Washington has led to increased fire frequency. More frequent fires give further competitive advantage to cheatgrass at the expense of native species. Scientists are looking at the impacts of herbicides, prescribed fire, and post-fire seeding on reducing cheatgrass populations. Results of the study will assist land managers and planners in designing and implementing fuel management treatments to cost effectively reduce fire frequency and encourage native plant growth.

Final Report pdf document
Project Deliverables pdf document

Shrub Steppe Ecology website

Frequency and Season of Prescription Fires to Reduce Hazardous Fuel Loads on the Lower Piedmont of Georgia: Establishing a demonstration area on a 12 year old study

Project # 01B-3-1-05; Principal Investigator: Ken Outcalt

In 1989, a study was begun on an upland mixed pine/hardwood stand in the Brender Demonstration Forest in central Georgia. The study was designed to examine how effective various fire-return intervals, seasons of burning, and methods of burning were in reducing hazardous fuel accumulations, controlling understory shrubs, and sustaining biodiversity. Today, scientists are working on converting a portion of the study site into a demonstration area to communicate with the public about the benefits of frequent low intensity prescribed fire. Scientists also plan to document changes in the site over the 12-year study period and conduct annual bird surveys.

Final Report pdf document

Long-term Dormant-Season Burning Interval Study in the Palmetto/Gallberry Fuel Complex: Establishing an Adjacent Growing-Season Burn Study and Making Both Demonstration Areas

Project # 01B-3-1-04; Principal Investigator: Ken Outcalt

The Osceola National Forest in Florida contains a unique set of long-term prescribed burning plots in an 85-year old natural stand of longleaf pine. Fuel and vegetation data have been collected pre- and post-fire since 1958 when the plots were established. Researchers are developing a comprehensive demonstration area at the site that includes signs, displays, and maps. Growing season burn plots will be established on an adjacent area to demonstrate seasonal effects of burning. The area will be used to show professionals and laypeople the effects of dormant-season and growing-season burn treatments and allow them to compare these to control plots.

Final Report pdf document

Dormant-Season Prescription Fires to Reduce Hazardous Fuel Loads on the South Carolina Coastal Plain: Establishing a Demonstration Area on a 40+ year study

Project # 01B-3-1-03; Principal Investigator: Ken Outcalt

In 1958, a 40-acre study site was established on the Francis Marion National Forest in South Carolina to compare the value of different prescribed burn intervals for reducing hazardous fuels buildup on Lower Costal Plain sites. Today, scientists are working to develop signs, displays, maps and other educational materials at the site for communicating results of research studies and describing the role of fire in the ecosystem. The location of the site within easy driving distance of three major urban centers (Charleston, SC, Savannah, GA, and Columbia, SC) makes it an especially good venue for sharing information on fire ecology and management with urban residents.

Final Report pdf document

The Flomaton Natural Area: Demonstrating the benefits of fuel management and the risks of fire exclusion in an old-growth longleaf pine ecosystem

Project # 01B-3-1-01; Principal Investigator: John Kush

One of the few remaining virgin, old growth longleaf pine stands remaining in the Southeast is the Flomaton Natural Area in Alabama. The stand of 200+ year-old trees was burned regularly until 1950 when all burning and management activity ended. Since 1995, cooperating partners have conducted four low-intensity prescribed fires at this site. Scientists are developing a fuel management demonstration area on the site that will include interpretive signs and other educational material to show landowners and managers how these treatments have served to reduce unnatural fuel loads. Scientists will also monitor the response of trees, understory shrubs, and soil to the prescribed fires and develop guidelines for fuel management.

Final Report pdf document

Effectiveness of Postfire Seeding to Reduce Cheatgrass (Bromus tectorum) Growth and Reproduction in Recently Burned Sagebrush Steppe

Project # 01C-3-3-13; Principal Investigator: Matt Brooks

The positive relationship between cheatgrass (Bromus tectorum) and fire frequency is a major concern for land managers in semi-arid shrublands throughout western North America, particularly in Great Basin sagebrush steppe. Management tools are needed to break this cycle, and this project will evaluate the use of postfire seeding to suppress the growth and reproduction of cheatgrass in low elevation sagebrush steppe dominated by Wyoming big sagebrush (artemisia tridentata ssp. Wyomingensis). Evaluations include the seeding of introduced vs. native seed mixes and grasses vs. grasses plus leguminous forbs, and postfire soil conditions such as nutrient level and seedbank composition that may influence the effectiveness of postfire seeding treatments. Effects of seeding on the species composition and abundance of native plants will also be evaluated. The information obtained will be presented as a set of recommendations for land managers to use when designing postfire seeding protocols, and as a set of working hypotheses for research scientists to use when formulating new studies to improve knowledge of fire and invasive species ecology and management in sagebrush steppe.

Further information at: http://www.werc.usgs.gov/fire/lv/postfireseeding/greatbasin
Final Report: 01C-3-3-13_final_report.pdf
Fact Sheet: To Seed or Not to Seed: Effects of Seeding Native vs. Non-native Grasses on Plant Communities in Recently Burned Sagebrush Steppe pdf document

Managing Fuels in Northeastern Barrens

Project # 01C-3-1-05; Principal Investigator: David W. Crary

Fire-dependent barrens of the Northeast are important habitat for numerous rare, threatened, and endangered species and also represent the most dangerous wildland fuel type in that region. Fire in barrens pose a significant wildland-urban interface risk in this densely populated area. Barrens occur throughout the northeastern and mid-Atlantic states on drought-prone soils, and are dominated by pitch pine, scrub oak, various tree oak species, and several ericaceous shrub species. Fire behavior in barrens vegetation is comparable to southern rough of the Southeast and chaparral of the West. Two demonstration sites have been established where barrens fuels are managed using innovative combinations of overstory thinning, mechanical treatment of shrub fuels, sheep grazing and prescribed fire to reduce fuel loads, wildfire intensity, and wildland-urban interface risk. This project is addressing the effectiveness of combination treatments in reducing fuel loads and fire intensity in barrens, and custom BEHAVE fuel models for both unaltered and managed barrens fuels will be revised, tested, and refined. Results from this project will be applicable to management of barrens fuels on federal, state, and private lands throughout the Northeast.

A thesis paper on "Characterizing Canopy Fuels as They Affect Fire Behavior in Pitch Pine" by Matthew J. Duveneck is available at: 01C-3-1-05duveneck_thesis.pdf
Further information is available at: http://www.umass.edu/nrc/nebarrensfuels/

FY 2000

Evaluation of three alternative fuel management treatments for eastern white pine

Project # 00-2-35; Principal Investigator: James Cook

The white pine type occupies about 500,000 acres in the Great Lakes Region and is considered fire dependent. Fire needs to be re-introduced into the ecosystem but since the forest type has received little study, information to guide fire prescriptions is lacking. Researchers will compare effects of three fuel treatment prescriptions (a standard mechanical treatment plus herbicide, a backing fire treatment, and a strip-head fire treatment) in the eastern white pine type on Menominee Tribal land in northern Wisconsin. Findings from this study and demonstration areas associated with the study will assist land managers in achieving management objectives through the use of fire and other fuel treatments.

Final Report pdf document

Fuels treatment demonstration sites in the Boreal Forests of Interior Alaska

Project # 00-2-34; Principal Investigator: Robert Ott

Changes in settlement patterns and policies in Alaska that began in the 1970s have led to population increases in or adjacent to forested areas and have intensified the wildland urban interface (WUI) fire problem. Today about 80% of the Alaska population lives in communities potentially at risk from wildland fire. As the frequency and cost of fires in the WUI increase, the need for fuel reduction techniques to create defensible space increases. Scientists are developing a fuels treatment demonstration site in the boreal forests of interior Alaska to compare the effectiveness, environmental effects, and cost of four different shaded fuelbreak treatments in high density white spruce stands located on flood plains. The demonstration sites will be available to officials, resource management professionals and interested publics for a minimum of seven years.

Final Report pdf document

BLM Snapshots 2004 pdf document
Alaska Fuels Demo Pamphlet pdf document

Control of Invasive Annual Grasses in the Mojave Desert

Project # 00-2-32; Principal Investigator: Matt Brooks

The native vegetation in the Mojave Desert of southwestern North America is relatively fireproof due to the mostly bare interspaces that occur between the shrubs, bunchgrasses, cacti and trees that grow there. Historically, these spaces have acted as a network of small firebreaks that hinder the spread of fire. However, the increasing dominance of invasive annual grasses since the 1970s has created an almost continuous and highly flammable fuel bed that is changing the face of the Mojave Desert. Use of fire and herbicides during the spring to control the invasive annual grasses has been used with mixed success. Researchers will establish a demonstration site where the effects of these two methods in reducing fine fuels and the dominance of invasive annual grasses will be measured. Results of this effort will help managers determine the feasibility and cost effectiveness of controlling fine fuels and invasive annual grasses in the Mojave Desert.

Final Report pdf document

USGS Publication Brief: Plant Diversity and Fire Effects in Blackbrush Shrublands pdf document

Other documents:

Restoring mixed conifer ecosystems to pre-fire suppression era conditions in Crater Lake National Park

Project # 00-2-31; Principal Investigator: Jim Agee

In 1976, after about 80 years of aggressive fire suppression, a prescribed fire program was initiated in Crater Lake National Park to create conditions favoring retention of large ponderosa pine. Unexpected mortality of these large trees occurred during the ten-year program of prescribed fires leading to discontinuation of the burning program in 1987. However, the need to manage understory fuel buildups in ponderosa pine stands remained. Researchers are examining the effects of conducting prescribed fires in the spring (when there are high fuel moistures) on forest floor characteristics, tree survival, mortality and establishment in mixed conifer forests in Crater Lake National Park. This work will provide park managers with new guidance on when to burn and the potential consequences of implementing different treatment alternatives.

Final Report pdf document

Fire hazard reduction in Ponderosa Pine plantations

Project # 00-2-30; Principal Investigator: John Swanson

Pine plantation establishment is common throughout the nation as the most effective means of reforestation after fire or harvest. For example, plantations cover nearly 400,000 acres in 9 National Forests in central California. High intensity wildfires are also common throughout California. Protecting the investment in the ponderosa and other pine plantations from destruction by fire adds to the complexities of forest resource management in this region. Mechanical and hand thinning, cut-to-length harvesting, and prescribed fire may all be necessary to reduce hazardous fuel levels in these plantations but the effects of these various fuel treatments are not fully understood. Researchers will examine the efficacy of mechanical and hand methods with and without prescribed burning in reducing fire hazard severity in plantations in the Stanislaus National Forest in central California. Once experimental plots are established they will become a demonstration site for treatment effects.

Final Report pdf document

Fire Application to Saltcedar Dominated Riparian Areas

Project # 00-2-29; Principal Investigator: Brent Racher

Saltcedar, an exotic shrub that has invaded riparian areas throughout the western United States, often develops into dense thickets that displace native trees, shrubs, and herbaceous plants. Although eradication of saltcedar is often desirable it is neither likely nor feasible. Prescribed fire has been used in riparian areas to manage saltcedar by reducing canopy cover and fuel accumulations, but little information is available on the response of the riparian ecosystem to fire. Scientists’ efforts are directed at developing prescriptions for applying fire to reduce hazardous fuels in saltcedar dominated riparian areas, and evaluate ecosystem response to burning and reburning at different periods throughout the year. Results of this work will provide landowners and managers with prescribed burning management options that will best meet their needs.

Final Report and project information website.

Managing Fuels and Forest Structure in the Southern Boreal Forest on Minnesota's National Forests

Project # 00-2-23; Principal Investigator: Daniel W. Gilmore

An unprecedented "Dericho" wind storm on July 4, 1999 changed the character of about 400,000 acres in the Boundary Water Canoe Area Wilderness (BWCAW) and surrounding area. Large areas of blowdown occurred creating huge concentrations of fuels and increasing the risk of large fires. This study established approximately 448 permanent plots and 1,700 sub-plots on 32 selected sites to monitor prescribed burning, salvage logging, piling and burning methods to alter the quantity and structure of the fuel profile.

Final Report pdf document

Additional publications and reports:

Alternative Fuel Reduction Treatments in the Gunflint Corridor of the Superior National Forest
Effects of Blow-Down and Fuel Reduction on Forest Succession Pathways in Northern Minnesota
Cumulative Effects of a Severe Windstorm and Subsequent Silvicultural Treatments....

A Demonstration Area on Ecosystem Response to Watershed-Scale Burns in Great Basin Pinyon-Juniper Woodlands

Project # 00-2-15; Principal Investigator: Jeanne Chambers, et al.

This project established a demonstration area on national forests in central Nevada to study the costs and ecological impacts of implementing large scale prescribed burns in areas where pinyon and juniper populations are increasing in native Great Basin ecosystems. Four research burns (2 to 6 hectares each) were conducted in spring 2002, and an additional 900 acres were treated within the watershed in spring 2004. Data on stand densities, fuel loads, understory vegetation, and soil and vegetation responses from the research burns were collected in 2002 through 2004.

Final Report pdf document

Conversion of Upland Loblolly Pine-Hardwood Stands to Longleaf Pine: Does it Influence Fuel Load, Restore Native Forest Cover, and Reduce Fire Danger

Project # 00-2-06; Principal Investigator: James Haywood

Without fire, wildland fuels accumulate quickly in the Southeast United States and understory vegetation soon shifts from a grass-dominated fine fuel cover to a woody plant cover of highly flammable shrubs. Recent efforts to restore native longleaf pine trees on sites now covered with loblolly pine and hardwood species have been problematic because it is difficult to get rid of the midlevel shrubs that change fire intensity and behavior and out-compete longleaf pine seedlings. Research is aimed at evaluating how different combinations of mechanical and controlled burning treatments effect the development of forest fuels and vegetative composition in sites being restored to longleaf pine. The study will continue over a period of 15 years and study sites will serve as demonstration areas for different fuel treatment options.

Final Report pdf document