Read online: 
http://www.esa.org/esablog/research/the-rim-fire-one-year-later-a-natural-experiment-in-fire-ecology-and-management/

The enormous conflagration known as the Rim Fire was in full fury, raging 
swiftly from crown to crown among mature trees, when it entered the backcountry 
of Yosemite National Park in California's Sierra Nevada in late August 2013. 
But inside the park, the battle began to turn, enacting a case study in the way 
management decisions and drought can combine to fuel large, severe fires.

"When the Rim Fire hit the park, it eventually encountered lands where fire had 
been used as a management tool, rather than immediately suppressed," said Hugh 
Safford, a regional ecologist for the U.S. Forest Service based out of Vallejo, 
Cal. "When the Rim Fire hit these areas, the amount and continuity of forest 
fuel became a limiting factor," he said. "There just wasn't enough fuel in the 
system to keep it going."

Safford will lead a group of visiting ecologists on a two-day excursion into 
the Rim Fire's path this August during the Ecological Society of America's 99th 
Annual Meeting to view the effects of the fire on adjacent landscapes that have 
been managed very differently over the last century.

Fire ecology is a hot topic at this year's meeting, which will bring 3,500 
environmental scientists to Sacramento on August 10-15 to discuss the most 
recent advances in ecological research, education, and policy.

Day one of the field trip will take visitors to sites in the Stanislaus 
National Forest, and day two to the National Park.

"The minute you leave the park, you're on lands that get used by a lot of 
people for a lot of things," Safford said. "The Forest Service is dealing with 
places that have had a lot of human impact and occupants."

The Rim Fire: a natural experiment

Rim Fire, California 2013. Mike McMillan, USFS.
Fire Line. The Rim Fire blazes in tree crowns of the Stanislaus National 
Forest, California, in late August, 2013. Credit, Mike McMillan/ U.S. Forest 
Service.

The Rim Fire is in a sense a natural experiment. Yosemite, set aside in 1864, 
is mostly old growth forest, in which lightning-ignited fires have often been 
allowed to burn since the 1970s. The National Forest is a working landscape 
that includes private lands, major highways, dams, power lines, and 
communities, which the Forest Service protects by suppressing wildfire.

"I'm not suggesting one's right and one's wrong, but it presents an interesting 
contrast," Safford said, "It's a good case study to look at the effects of 
large, severe fires on watersheds subject to different management regimes."

The fir, cedar, and pine forests of the high Sierra are adapted to frequent 
fires ignited by lightning.  Fire scars on older trees, including the 
2000-year-old giant sequoias record a history of low intensity fires recurring 
every 10 to 20 years. Fires that burned at low intensity through the understory 
tended to kill few of the mature trees, on the order of 5 to 10 percent. Recent 
studies have found that wildfires in the mixed conifer forests of the Sierra 
often run out of fuel and go out when they encounter sections of forest that 
have already burned within the last decade.

Though it smoldered on into October, by September 3rd, 2013, the Forest Service 
was reporting that the Rim Fire was 70 percent contained. Most of the acreage 
burned in the first week. The blaze that began as an alarming, out-of-control 
monster became just another big fire that managers were using to do ecological 
work.

Ignited by a hunter's illegal campfire near the Rim of the World Vista in 
Stanislaus National Forest on August 17th, the fire ultimately burned for three 
months, consuming 257,314 acres of trees and $127 million taxpayer dollars. 
Smoke from the fire prompted air quality warnings from the Bay Area to Reno, 
Nev. It was the largest recorded fire in the Sierra Nevada.

A trend toward mega-fires

In the past few decades, ecologists have noted a trend toward intense 
"mega-fires" in the mountain forests of the western states. Recent 
record-breaking fires in Arizona and New Mexico join the  2013 Rim Fire, the 
250,000-acre Carlton Complex fire currently burning in eastern Washington 
State, and the even larger Buzzard Complex fire in Oregon.

According to Safford, increased fuel on National Forest lands resulting from 
the long-term lack of fire is one of the principal drivers of recent increases 
in the size and severity of wildfires, trends which appear to be absent in the 
National Parks.

"The Rim Fire is not random occurrence. It's part of a trend in big fires, and 
a real wake up call," Scott Stephens agreed. Stephens, a professor at the 
University of California, Berkeley, authored a recent review on the 
characteristics and challenges of mega-fires with fellow fire specialists from 
Australia, Canada, Spain, and China, as well as the western U.S. in the March 
2014 issue of Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment.

Large fires are a problem facing many of the world's temperate and boreal 
forests. As was the case with the Rim Fire, mega-fires are often driven by a 
combination of drought, heat, wind, fuel from fire suppression, budget cuts, 
and encroaching development, Stephens said.

These big fires are more expensive to contain and to recover from than the more 
frequent but less destructive fires that used to characterize the Sierra's 
mixed conifer forests, and they are dangerous for firefighters. They char 
enormous swaths of land, leaving large areas of up to 30,000 acres with no 
mature trees to seed a new generation.

"Most of the trees died in the Rim Fire. Not just the little guys. We're 
looking at multiple patches of high severity fire that are of thousands of 
acres in size," said Safford. "Where are the seeds going to come from? The 
landscape will be dominated by brush for a long time."

Prelude to a habitat regime change

Very large, intense fires can take out entire habitat ranges, and, in 
combination with the pressures of land use change and development, leave 
nowhere for animals to retreat and await regrowth (while at the same time 
benefitting species that thrive in snag fields). Forest is slow to return, 
topsoil erodes, and quick-spreading opportunistic exotics capitalize on the 
disturbance.

In concert with warming climate, which is increasing water stress on forest 
species, there is potential for a permanent change in habitat type, from forest 
to brush or to grassland.

"After severe fire, mixed conifer forests in the Sierra Nevada are replaced by 
chaparral stands. When chaparral burns, it burns hot, and with the increasing 
frequencies of severe fire that are predicted, we expect to see progressively 
more forest converting to brush and not returning. With continued high fire 
frequencies, brush can convert to grassland as well," said Safford. "We're 
seeing that type of thing happening in southern California already, mostly in 
chaparral lands that are turning to fields of exotic grass."

Questions of forest management are really questions about our priorities for 
the function and appearance of our landscapes-juggling priorities to protect 
property and respiratory health, esthetics, habitat, carbon sequestration, and 
water availability.

Given the difficulty of managing fire in proximity to homes and businesses, the 
Forest Service is considering mechanically thinning forests where it can, but 
these initiatives remain small in proportion to the huge fuel reduction 
backlog, and are currently expensive compared to controlled burning. Safford 
thinks it is an effort that all stakeholders should prioritize.

"We need to think about our grandkids," said Stephens. "When I think about 
climate change, I look at the opportunities to do more to change the structure 
of the forest before big fires hit, and create the conditions so that when it 
does burn, we can have a party." In 50 years, he said, opportunities are going 
to get squashed between the management history of the forests and an 
increasingly warm, dry climate. "If we begin the transformation now, we give 
future managers options."

***

FT 18: The 2013 Rim Fire - Forest Management Influencing Fire Ecology
Friday, August 15, 2014: 7:00 AM-7:00 PM
Organizer: Hugh Safford, U.S. Forest Service, Region 5
Co-organizers: Eric Winford , Gus Smith , Jan van Wagtendonk , Kent van 
Wagtendonk, Becky L. Estes and Susan L. Ustin

More fire ecology at the upcoming meeting 
http://esa.org/am/info/press/topics/#fire 

Complete story on ESA's news page: 
http://www.esa.org/esablog/research/the-rim-fire-one-year-later-a-natural-experiment-in-fire-ecology-and-management/
 

And press release archive:
http://www.esa.org/esa/?p=11975 


********
Liza Lester
Communications Officer
Ecological Society of America
Washington, DC
(202) 833-8773 ext. 211

Ecotone: news and views on ecological science
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