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What happens when a wildfire sweeps through your study area?

On Aug. 10, 2013, a wildfire started in a steep canyon on the Tahoe National Forest. When it was finally declared controlled on Oct. 8, the 'American Fire' as it was named, had burned approximately 27,440 acres, including half (1,100 acres) of the Sierra Nevada Adaptive Management Project (SNAMP) Last Chance study site.

The American Fire. (Photos: Chris Dow, SNAMP FFEH team)

Initiated more than 7 years ago, SNAMP is a collaboration project involving the University of California, UC Cooperative Extension, the US Forest Service, other state and federal agencies and the public that explores the effects of fuels reduction or thinning projects conducted by the Forest Service on forest health, fire behavior, water quality and quantity, wildlife (California spotted owl and Pacific fisher) and public participation. Scientists are using data collected from treated and untreated areas to model potential impacts of forest management. For example, fire modeling is being done to simulate what could happen in the event of a fire on the landscape. All of the science teams are integrating their results to provide forest managers with information that is relevant at the fireshed scale for future projects.

SNAMP meteorological station. (Photo: Phil Saksa, SNAMP Water team)
Before the American Fire broke out, work by the Forest Service on the Last Chance project treatment areas was mostly completed, including commercial timber harvesting, post-harvest surface fuels treatment and more than three-quarters of the prescribed fire acreage. UC forest researchers had resurveyed 99 percent of treated and untreated forest plots and were out in the forest working to complete the remaining plots when the fire started. The owl team had completed their surveys for the year at Last Chance and in the surrounding areas that comprise the regional study areas. The water team had in-stream monitoring equipment in place, as well as meteorological stations at several locations, recording and relaying data to UC Merced.

After the American Fire ignited west of the SNAMP study site, American River Ranger District staff ordered all science teams working in the area to evacuate. They removed several of the water team's wireless nodes that were threatened, along with the stream level monitoring equipment. They covered other equipment with fire blankets and bulldozed a defensive line around a meteorological station to keep the fire out of the immediate area.

Parts of the treated and untreated study areas in the Last Chance project, including completed thinning and prescribed burning units, were burned in the American Fire. Some of this area was intentionally backfired by firefighters to aid in fire management. The vast majority of the treated area burned at low severity with pockets of moderate severity. The decision to backfire through the middle of the Last Chance project was a direct result of the project's location and post-treatment fuel profile.

The final determination of how the vegetation survived the fire will probably not be made for another year since significant mortality can happen much later. There was one active spotted owl nest site on the fire perimeter and it was known to have juvenile owls. The site will be surveyed by the owl team in 2014. As a result of quick action by the US Forest Service, only one of the water team's wireless nodes was damaged by fire.

SNAMP water team equipment damaged by American Fire. (Photo: Phil Saksa, SNAMP Water team)
The SNAMP project comes to an end this year. Science teams are working with post-treatment but pre-fire data to complete their analysis, write individual chapters and create integration products. However at the same time, the American Fire provides a unique but fleeting opportunity to empirically examine the effects of fuels treatments. Thus planning is underway for further research at Last Chance to examine how wildfire under current management can transform ecosystem functions, and how to obtain desired results through novel fire management strategies. Adaptive management is analysis of an action, incorporation of new findings and adapting existing actions based on those results. SNAMP scientists want to take full advantage of the learning opportunities provided by the investment in SNAMP and the impacts of the American Fire at Last Chance.

 

Posted on Thursday, February 27, 2014 at 9:08 AM
Tags: American Fire (1), SNAMP (10), wildfire (183)

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