Abstract

Prescribed and resource benefit fires are used to manage fuels in fire-prone landscapes in the Southwest. These practices, however, typically occur under different conditions, potentially leading to differences in fire behavior and effects. The objectives of this study were to investigate the effects of recent prescribed fires, resource benefit fires, and repeated fires in ponderosa pine forests, as well as recent resource benefit fires in pinyon-juniper woodlands. The Gila National Forest was the study area because it has a rich history of using fire as a restoration tool. In each vegetation type, fuels and stand structure were sampled using random plots stratified by burn severity in resource benefit fires. In ponderosa pine, sampling and analysis also included prescribed fire and areas subject to repeated resource benefit fires. To assess potential fire behavior, we used the crown fire behavior prediction model Nexus using ninetieth percentile weather conditions. In ponderosa pine forests, surface fuels were similar between prescribed fires and low severity resource benefit fires. However, resource benefit fires significantly reduced basal area, resulting in lower loading of canopy fuels and crown fire potential. Additionally, effects of resource benefit fire on stand structure and fuels seem to be sustained in areas that burned in two or three resource benefit fires in the last century. In pinyon-juniper woodlands, resource benefit low severity fires had no effect on surface or canopy fuel loads. Moderate severity resource benefit fires, on the other hand, did significantly reduce surface and canopy fuel loads. Results from this study are pertinent to fire and fuels managers throughout the southwestern United States who utilize prescribed and resource benefit fire to reduce fuel loads and restore historical forest conditions.

Highlights

  • Mechanical treatments and prescribed fire have been successfully utilized at small scales to reduce fuel loads and the potential for crown fire in high risk areas

  • While total acreage burned in prescribed fires in the US currently exceeds that burned in resource benefit fires on an annual basis, data from the National Interagency Fire Center shows that the average fire size for the period

  • Since ponderosa pine forest evolved under a pattern of repeated surface fires (Swetnam and Baisan 1996), one would expect that reintroducing frequent fire would lead to forests that are less susceptible to crown fire

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Summary

ReseaRch aRticle

Short- and long-term effectS on fuelS, foreSt Structure, and wildfire potential from preScribed fire and reSource benefit fire in SouthweStern foreStS, uSa. On the other hand, Holden et al (2007) have suggested that repeated fires have restored forest conditions to near pre-settlement conditions Between these two extremes there is a substantial knowledge gap in terms of how different fire management strategies and burn severities impact fuels and potential fire behavior in both ponderosa pine forests and pinyon-juniper woodlands in the southwestern US. The effect of repeated resource benefit fires on other factors such as surface and crown fuel loading and the subsequent potential for crown fire spread remains largely unknown This information is critical, given recent changes in US fire policy that allow land managers greater flexibility in utilizing resource benefit fire, and could potentially lead to greater adoption of this practice (USDA and USDI 2009). What are the effects of recent (

Study Site
Study Design
Unknown Three RBFf Middle
Ponderosa pine
Data Collection
Data Analysis
Findings
Fire type
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